-
accepted species of
mosses,
commonly known as
sphagnum moss, also bog
moss and
quacker moss (although that term is also
sometimes used for
peat). Ac****ulations...
- bogs, mires, moors, or muskegs.
Sphagnum moss, also
called peat moss, is one of the most
common components in
peat,
although many
other plants can contribute...
- the word "mulch" is used
specifically to
refer to very fine
tanbark or
peat moss.
Organic mulches decay over time and are temporary. The way a particular...
- Wales. It
comprises three peat bogs,
Bettisfield Moss, Fenn's
Moss and
Whixall Moss. With Wem
Moss (also an NNR) and
Cadney Moss, they are
collectively a...
- type of bog
rises in
height over time as a
result of
peat formation. They are like
sponges of
peat moss, full of water, that form a more or less dome shape...
- Girgensohn's bogmoss, Girgensohn's
sphagnum or
common green peat moss, is a
species of
peat moss with a
Holarctic and Indo-Malesian distribution.
First described...
-
bogland is a
wetland that ac****ulates
peat as a
deposit of dead
plant materials –
often mosses,
typically sphagnum moss. It is one of the four main types...
-
symbioses and not
related to
mosses.: 3 The main
commercial significance of
mosses is as the main
constituent of
peat (mostly the
genus Sphagnum), although...
-
Sphagnum angustifolium, the fine bogmoss, is a
species of
peat moss with a
Holarctic distribution. A
member of the S. recurvum
species complex within...
- of
peat moss form as
water levels fall and
nutrients ac****ulate. In
eutrophic waters, the
formation of
floating mats is
caused by
underwater peat that...