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Dive into the research topics where Wendelin Wichtmann is active.

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Featured researches published by Wendelin Wichtmann.


Archive | 2016

Paludiculture: sustainable productive use of wet and rewetted peatlands

Hans Joosten; Greta Gaudig; Franziska Tanneberger; Sabine Wichmann; Wendelin Wichtmann; Aletta Bonn; Tim Allott; Martin Evans; Rob Stoneman

Introduction The origin of mainstream Western agriculture lies in the ‘fertile crescent’ of the Middle East and, in this cradle of arable farming, dryland plants were domesticated that currently constitute some of our major cereal, legume and fibre crops. This ‘semi-desert’ agriculture installed the idea that productive land must be dry, a paradigm that ever since has been applied also to wet, organic soils. We deeply drain peatland to grow arid maize Zea mays in Germany, strongly water-demanding sugar cane Saccharum spp. in Florida and the desert species Aloe vera in Indonesia. Practices like this have made agriculture the main driver of global peatland loss (Joosten and Clarke 2002, Chapter 2) and drained peatlands are thus primarily found in regions that are climatically favourable for agriculture, i.e. in the temperate zone and the (sub)tropics (Chapter 2). Peatland drainage causes inherent peatland degradation, a substantial financial and environmental burden and eventually the loss of the productive value of the peat soil (Joosten, Tapio-Bistrom and Tol 2012). These problems are increasingly being recognised: worldwide several thousands of square kilometres of drained agricultural peatlands have been rewetted in recent years for climate change mitigation, for biodiversity, or simply because maintaining drainage infrastructure had become too expensive. Rewetting has indeed re-established major regulating and cultural services of wet peatlands, including carbon storage, flood control, water purification, archive function and biodiversity (Theuerkauf et al. 2006; Limpens et al. 2008; Trepel 2010; Tanneberger and Wichtmann 2011; Joosten et al. 2015a; Chapter 6). The provisioning services of these formerly productive lands, however, were mostly lost as the rewetted areas were generally earmarked for nature conservation with the condition that they would no longer be used agriculturally. On the other hand, the quest for productive land is rapidly growing worldwide. This demand will continue to increase, because of the inevitable growth of human population and the justified demands for food security and more welfare. The demand will also grow, because biomass from cultivated land will increasingly have to replace the resources that until now were obtained from the wilderness (wood, non-timber forest products, bushmeat) and the bedrock (coal, oil, gas, minerals). Both the persistent use of drained peatlands for agriculture and the conversion of agriculturally used peatlands to unused wetlands imply that we are losing productive land at a time when we need it most.


Archive | 2014

Think rural! Think paludicultural!

Wendelin Wichtmann; Till Holsten; Anke Nordt; Tobias Dahms; Christian Schröder

Geringe Bevolkerungsdichte und geringe Wertschopfung je Flache sind bekannte Probleme der vorwiegend peripheren landlichen Raume im Flachenland Mecklenburg-Vorpommern. Doch Losungen konnen bisher ungesehen vor der Haustur liegen. Fur dezentrale Energiegewinnung und wirtschaftliche Alternative, Schaffung lokaler Arbeitsplatze sowie Klima- und Umweltschutz hat das niedermoorreiche Mecklenburg-Vorpommern groses Potential: Paludikultur. Wendelin Wichtmann und Till Holsten konnten wahrend einer Exkursion im Rahmen des „Think rural“-Symposiums zur Biogasanlage in Wolgast entsprechende Losungen vorstellen. Sie stellten in der nahe gelegenen Ziese-Niederung verschiede Nutzungsformen und Projekte zur nachhaltigen Nutzung von Niedermooren vor.


Environmental development | 2015

Soil carbon, multiple benefits

E. Milne; Steven A. Banwart; Elke Noellemeyer; David James Abson; Cristiano Ballabio; Francesca Bampa; André Bationo; N.H. Batjes; Martial Bernoux; T. Bhattacharyya; Helaina Black; Daniel E. Buschiazzo; Zucong Cai; Carlos Eduardo Pellegrino Cerri; Kun Cheng; Claude Compagnone; Rich Conant; Heitor Luiz da Costa Coutinho; Delphine de Brogniez; Fabiano de Carvalho Balieiro; Christopher Duffy; Christian Feller; E. C. C. Fidalgo; Cristiane Figueira da Silva; Roger Funk; Greta Gaudig; Patrick T. Gicheru; Marty M Goldhaber; Pia Gottschalk; Frederic Goulet


Archive | 2011

Carbon credits from peatland rewetting : climate - biodiversity - land use

Franziska Tanneberger; Wendelin Wichtmann


Mires and Peat | 2013

Sphagnum farming in Germany - a review of progress.

Greta Gaudig; F. Fengler; Matthias Krebs; Anja Prager; J. Schulz; Sabine Wichmann; Hans Joosten; Wendelin Wichtmann; John Couwenberg


Mires and Peat | 2014

Combustibility of biomass from wet fens in Belarus and its potential as a substitute for peat in fuel briquettes

Wendelin Wichtmann; C. Oehmke; Susanne Bärisch; F. Deschan; U. Malashevich; Franziska Tanneberger; Michael Succow; APB-Birdlife Belarus


Ecological Engineering | 2016

Combustibility of biomass from perennial crops cultivated on a rewetted Mediterranean peatland

Vittoria Giannini; Claudia Oehmke; Nicola Silvestri; Wendelin Wichtmann; Federico Dragoni; E. Bonari


Soil carbon: science, management and policy for multiple benefits | 2015

Managing soil carbon in Europe: paludicultures as a new perspective for peatlands.

Hans Joosten; Greta Gaudig; René Krawczynski; Franziska Tanneberger; Sabine Wichmann; Wendelin Wichtmann; Steven A. Banwart; Elke Noellemeyer; E. Milne


Archive | 2016

Paludikultur - Bewirtschaftung nasser Moore

Wendelin Wichtmann; Christian Schröder; Hans Joosten


Archive | 2016

Paludiculture - productive use of wet peatlands

Wendelin Wichtmann; Christian Schröder; Hans Joosten

Collaboration


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Hans Joosten

University of Greifswald

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Greta Gaudig

University of Greifswald

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E. Milne

Colorado State University

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Elke Noellemeyer

National University of La Pampa

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Claudia Oehmke

University of Greifswald

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