Monday, 06 June 2022 07:54

Wetland Care first scholarship award

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Shannon Bentley with DUNZ board members Jim Law and Ross Cottle Shannon Bentley with DUNZ board members Jim Law and Ross Cottle

Restored wetlands on private farms deliver ecosystem services and increase diversity, with varied results, a recent study has found.

 

Shannon Bentley, a master’s student at Victoria University and the first recipient of a Wetland Care Scholarship funded by Ducks Unlimited NZ, is studying how wetland restoration on farms changes plant, soil, and microbial characteristics.

In 2018-2019, as a part of the research group, Wetlands for People and Place, she sampled 18 privately restored wetlands and paired unrestored wetlands on farms in the Wairarapa.

For her master’s thesis, she analysed the wetland plant communities, soil physiochemical characteristics, and soil microbial communities to understand how they change with restoration. She found that wetland restoration on private property shifts plant, soil, and microbial characteristics towards desirable remnant wetland conditions. She also showed that the outcomes of wetland restoration varied within and between wetlands.

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Read 2442 times Last modified on Monday, 06 June 2022 08:02

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