# Tardigrade communities in pristine, drained and restored pine mire forests

**Authors:** Hennariikka Mäenpää, Merja Elo, Janne S. Kotiaho, Emma Meriläinen, Sara Calhim

PMC · DOI: 10.1186/s12862-025-02458-9 · BMC Ecology and Evolution · 2025-11-21

## TL;DR

This study examines how tardigrade communities in pine mire forests differ between pristine, drained, and restored habitats.

## Contribution

The study provides new insights into the effects of peatland restoration on microscopic fauna, specifically tardigrades.

## Key findings

- Tardigrade occupancy probability was lower in drained and restored sites compared to pristine sites.
- Some tardigrade genera were less likely to occur in drained and restored sites than in pristine ones.
- Tardigrade distribution was strongly associated with moss type rather than site treatment.

## Abstract

Restoration has become one of the key measures in improving the state of biodiversity. However, restoration outcomes are in many cases not well understood, and species communities have not been monitored long enough to determine whether they can or cannot recover completely to the pristine reference state. So far, it is particularly poorly known how the communities of microscopic fauna vary within and between pristine, drained and restored peatland habitats. We collected 270 moss samples from a replicated restoration experimental set up to study whether tardigrade communities differ between pristine, drained and restored pine mire forests. In addition, we estimated the associations between tardigrade genera and the moss type they live in. We found a weak pattern of tardigrade occupancy probability being lower in drained and restored sites than in pristine sites. Furthermore, some tardigrade genera were less likely to occur at the drained and restored (11 to 16 years after restoration) sites when compared to pristine sites, although no significant differences in community compositions between treatments were found. We found notable within site variation, which is indicative of high patchiness in tardigrade distribution. We also found strong associations between some of the moss types and tardigrade occurrences. Therefore, tardigrade occurrence seems to be more linked to microhabitat changes, such as mosses, than treatment of the sites. Although the differences between treatments were small, our results show that drained and restored pine mire forests may provide less suitable habitat for tardigrades than the pristine sites do. Favorable habitat conditions for tardigrades in these ecosystems are likely to arise from combinations of large- (e.g., hydrology) and small-scale (moss type) environmental variables that are both affected by drainage and restoration.

The online version contains supplementary material available at 10.1186/s12862-025-02458-9.

## Full-text entities

- **Chemicals:** lead (MESH:D007854), water (MESH:D014867), ethanol (MESH:D000431)
- **Species:** Sphagnum (genus) [taxon 13804], Eriophorum vaginatum (species) [taxon 76438], Milnesium tardigradum (species) [taxon 46460], Bryophyta (mosses, clade) [taxon 3208], Warnstorfia fluitans (species) [taxon 140400], Polytrichum commune (species) [taxon 3213], Dicranum (genus) [taxon 3221], Sphagnum girgensohnii (species) [taxon 128204], Tardigrada (tardigrades, phylum) [taxon 42241], Sphagnum capillifolium (species) [taxon 128189], Sphagnum balticum (species) [taxon 128184], Dicranum polysetum (species) [taxon 98326], Betula pubescens (downy birch, species) [taxon 38787], Sphagnum russowii (species) [taxon 128233], Carex lasiocarpa (species) [taxon 241213], Hypsibius (genus) [taxon 58670], Homo sapiens (human, species) [taxon 9606], Calliergon cordifolium (species) [taxon 671105], Picea abies (Norway spruce, species) [taxon 3329], Minibiotus (genus) [taxon 510447], Pinus sylvestris (Scotch pine, species) [taxon 3349], Sphagnum divinum (species) [taxon 2779801], Sphagnum squarrosum (species) [taxon 128240], Lithodesmium undulatum (species) [taxon 59812], Aulacomnium (genus) [taxon 67246], Pleurozium schreberi (species) [taxon 34163], Milnesium inceptum (species) [taxon 2512263], Polytrichum (genus) [taxon 3212]

## Full text

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## Figures

6 figures with captions in the complete paper: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC12639931/full.md

## References

3 references — full list in the complete paper: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC12639931/full.md

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Source: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC12639931