The state of mineral constituents and potential pollutants in a “virgin” part of peatland Ždralovac, an abandoned reclamation area and after a peat fire
Ždralovac peatland in the karst field Livanjsko polje in southwestern Bosnia and Herzegovina with an area of about 3.500 ha has always been drained and used for the regional people. But drainage, agriculture and climate change cause the peat drying in the summer and create the conditions for frequent fires and serious changes of peat properties. Since 1.000 ha of peatland was used for agriculture (abandoned areas for 25 years that are being cultivated again today), and the extracted peat is used as a raw material for the plant growing substrate. The presence of certain pollutants is a good indicator of the suitability of peat for the plant production. In this paper, the state of peat related to contamination with heavy metals, polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbons - PAHs and pesticide residues was investigated in undrained peat areas, reclamation areas and peat burning sites. The presence of heavy metals in concentrations higher than permitted was not recorded. The presence of combustion products PAHs was recorded on all surfaces, but only naphthalene exceeds the permitted concentrations of organic pollutants. Only pesticide residue of dichlorodiphenyltrichloroethane (DDT) was recorded in abandoned meliorated areas used in agriculture, and the concentration exceeded the level of uncontaminated land.