Fen, Definition, Description, Chemistry, Plants, Fen vs Bog, & Facts
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Descrição
Fen, type of wetland ecosystem, especially in a low-lying area, wholly or partly covered with water and dominated by grasses and grasslike plants such as sedges and reeds. Fens develop as the result of sustained flows of mineral-rich groundwater in the root zone, which limit the decomposition of plant debris and allow the formation of peat.

Rich Shrub Fen Guide - New York Natural Heritage Program

Swamps, Marshes, Bogs and Fens

Variation in peatland porewater chemistry over time and space along a bog to fen gradient - ScienceDirect

Agriculture, Free Full-Text

Adirondack Wetlands

The Nature Conservancy's Herrick Fen Nature Preserve

Wet Meadow - an overview

Prairie Fen - Michigan Natural Features Inventory

Plant macrofossil and biomarker evidence of fen–bog transition and associated changes in vegetation in two Finnish peatlands - Tiina Ronkainen, Erin L McClymont, Eeva-Stiina Tuittila, Minna Väliranta, 2014

Frontiers Abrupt Fen-Bog Transition Across Southern Patagonia: Timing, Causes, and Impacts on Carbon Sequestration

Fens, bogs and peatlands: 6+ million acres of Minnesota's unsung wilderness treasure
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