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Bogs and their close cousins--fens--are biologically fascinating wetlands. Their deep peat layers offer a glimpse into the geologic past--seeds, plant parts, and even animals may remain intact in the acidic peat for thousands of years. If a bog or fen exists on your property, consider yourself lucky as they are very rare.
These unusual wetlands are home to a variety of plants and animals including unique bog lemmings, pitcher plants, and sundews. The familiar song sparrow and red-winged blackbird live there along with yellow-bellied flycatchers, and Nashville warblers, which nest only in northern Michigan. American goldfinch, American woodcock, alder and willow flycatchers, and golden-winged and chestnut-sided warblers are other birds that use them. Ruffed grouse eat the catkins of bog birches, which often grow around the edges of bogs and fens, and migrating ducks use their open pools. Because bogs attract insects, shrews, mice, frogs, and toads, they also attract mink, raccoons, herons, and other predators. Moose also use these areas in the Upper Peninsula. In winter, the white cedar forests that often surround many bogs yield important browse and cover for deer. BogsBogs are unique wetlands because their nutrient-poor systems support a specific group of plant species. Such plants include carnivorous species such as pitcher plants, sundews, and bladderworts, which eat insects and are able to retain water from precipitation, and sphagnum moss, which grows abundantly over the layers of peat found here. Common shrubs include leatherleaf, bog laurel, bog rosemary and Labrador tea. Blueberries and cranberries are also common.
Bogs often lie in frost hollows or other cold, wet environments where cold air and water are trapped. On clear nights, heavier cold air settles to the ground and flows down slopes and valleys often ending in bog lakes or ponds. Although daytime surface temperatures may reach 90 to 100 degrees Farenheit, the root level of plants growing within a bog are typically 45 to 55 degrees Farenheit. Because of the great insulating quality of sphagnum moss, these areas rarely exceed 60 degrees Farenheit. As bogs age, they tend to become more acidic. As peat accumulates in bogs, it becomes tightly compressed by the weight of material lying over it, and the oldest part turns into fine-textured black muck. This compressed peat becomes impermeable, cutting off the bog from the water table making it acidic, or mineral poor. Over time, the older peat is colonized by shrubs and then trees such as white pine, tamarack, and black spruce.
Kettle-lake bogs begin as reeds, sedges, and mosses around the edges of lakes formed by glaciation. This vegetation slowly expands across the entire lake surface, forming a floating mat of peat. This mat slowly consolidates and is then dominated by sphagnum moss and other bog plants. Over time, the peat forms an impermeable layer and isolates the bog from the water table. Shrubs and trees then begin to move in. Thus, this process of natural succession turns an open-water lake into a forested wetland. This process may also reverse itself during cooler and wetter periods and become more open. Paludification bogs are formed by the blanketing of previously dry land by overgrowth of bog vegetation as it exceeds its basin boundaries. These bogs can be brought about by climatic change, hydrological change caused by beaver dams or logging, or the natural advancement of a peatland. Once this blanket advances and begins to accumulate, the formerly mineral-rich soil is cut off from the water table creating acidic conditions. This kills many existing trees and allows bog vegetation to dominate. FensFens are somewhat rare in Michigan. They are peat-covered grassy wetlands that are springy when walked upon. Fens are fed by mineral-rich artesian groundwater in the form of springs, rivulets, marl flats, or saturated peat. The constant supply of groundwater being forced up through accumulating peat causes some fens to appear higher than the surrounding terrain. Because the groundwater is rich in calcium and magnesium carbonates, the water is usually neutral or alkaline. Fens are often found on hillsides along lakes, streams, and rivers, which occur in glacial outwash on sandy glacial lakebeds. Others are located in broad outwash channels. Researchers distinguish among several different kinds of fens: prairie fens, northern fens, patterned fens, and poor fens.
Northern fens are dominated by sedges and rushes and are found in areas of northern Michigan where limestone bedrock is covered with a thin mantle of glacial drift. Marl flats are very common in these places. Orchids, gentians, and other plants may be present. Bulrush, spike rush, cinquefoil, sawgrass, and white cedar usually surround northern fens. Patterned fens have a gentle slope of less than one percent per mile, tend to have both acidic and alkaline areas, and feature strips of sedge-peat ridges only a few inches high alternating with depressions. The depressions are wettest with sedge and rush dominating. Besides sedges, the ridges may contain sphagnum, bog rosemary, bog birch, shrubby cinquefoil, leatherleaf, and stunted white spruce and larch. Patterned fens tend to occur on larger flat outwash or lake plain areas in the Upper Peninsula. Poor fens are those peatlands with reduced water flow and lower mineral content. Consequently, the saturated peat is somewhat acidic. These fens occur throughout the northern Lower Peninsula and Upper Peninsula. Dominated by sedges and grasses, poor fens lack the plant diversity of northern and patterned fens. Management Considerations
The following are options to consider when managing bogs and fens:
In summary, bogs and fens are highly unusual, important places. They are important to wildlife seeking secure cover where they can feed, nest, rear their young, and escape predators. They also provide areas for many types of unique, threatened, and endangered plant and animal species. If you have a bog or fen on your property, enjoy its uniqueness and diverse plant and animal life. Last Revised: September 28, 1999 |
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