Greenhouse gas fluxes of Wadden Sea salt marshes strongly vary among different vegetation zones

Author(s):  
Miriam Fuss ◽  
Norman Rueggen ◽  
Peter Mueller ◽  
Stefanie Nolte ◽  
Lars Kutzbach

<p>Salt marshes are highly valuable Blue Carbon ecosystems in the transition zone between marine and terrestrial environments. They play an important role in mitigating climate change due to high carbon sequestration rates through photosynthetic CO<sub>2</sub> uptake. However, it is poorly understood when and under which conditions they act as sinks or sources for other greenhouse gases like CH<sub>4</sub> and N<sub>2</sub>O.  A complex interplay of abiotic and biotic factors characterizes the biogeochemistry of these dynamic coastal wetland ecosystems. This interplay is in turn controlled by elevation in respect to mean high water level and the resulting inundation frequency.</p><p>We measured land‑atmosphere fluxes of CH<sub>4</sub>, N<sub>2</sub>O and CO<sub>2</sub> due to ecosystem respiration at Hamburger Hallig, North Frisia, Germany, combining a closed chamber approach with in situ‑measurements of a portable Fourier transform infrared absorption spectrometer (DX4015, Gasmet). Biweekly (Apr-Sept) and monthly (Oct-Mar) campaigns have started in December 2018 and cover the whole elevational gradient from the pioneer zone over the low marsh up to the high marsh.</p><p>While ecosystem respiration showed high variability over the seasonal course with fluxes up to +67 mmol*h<sup>-1</sup>*m<sup>-2</sup>, CH<sub>4</sub> and N<sub>2</sub>O fluxes indicated a strong dependence on elevation and thus vegetation zone. Emissions of CH<sub>4</sub> occurred only in the most frequently flooded pioneer zone (+0.17 to +0.35 µmol*h<sup>-1</sup>*m<sup>-2</sup>), whereas the less frequently flooded zones of the low and high marsh acted as CH<sub>4</sub> sinks (down to -1.1 µmol*h<sup>-1</sup>*m<sup>-2</sup>). Contrastingly, N<sub>2</sub>O solely showed positive fluxes (up to +1.0 µmol*h<sup>-1</sup>*m<sup>-2</sup>) in the high marsh and the more frequently flooded zones acted as sinks for N<sub>2</sub>O (down to ‑0.21 µmol*h<sup>-1</sup>*m<sup>-2</sup>). Air temperature and tidal sea water level fluctuations could already be identified as additional environmental drivers of varying greenhouse gas fluxes. Further analysis of abiotic and biotic driver variables will elucidate their impact in detail.</p><p>Our findings show that salt marshes are not only effective in assimilating CO<sub>2</sub>. They also show the ability to take up the strong greenhouse gases CH<sub>4</sub> and N<sub>2</sub>O in certain vegetation zones, emphasizing their important role in mitigating global warming.</p>

2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Beata Bukosa ◽  
Jenny Fisher ◽  
Nicholas Deutscher ◽  
Dylan Jones

Abstract. Understanding greenhouse gas–climate processes and feedbacks is a fundamental step in understanding climate variability and its links to greenhouse gas fluxes. Chemical transport models are the primary tool for linking greenhouse gas fluxes to their atmospheric abundances. Hence accurate simulations of greenhouse gases are essential. Here, we present a new simulation in the GEOS-Chem chemical transport model that couples the two main greenhouse gases: carbon dioxide (CO2) and methane (CH4), along with the indirect effects of carbon monoxide (CO), based on their chemistry. Our updates include the online calculation of the chemical production of CO from CH4 and the online production of CO2 from CO, both of which were handled offline in the previous versions of these simulations. We discuss differences between the offline (uncoupled) and online (coupled) calculation of the chemical terms and perform a sensitivity simulation to identify the impact of OH on the results. We compare our results with surface measurements from the NOAA Global Greenhouse Gas Reference Network (NOAA GGGRN), total column measurements from the Total Carbon Column Observing Network (TCCON) and aircraft measurements from the Atmospheric Tomography Mission (ATom). Relative to the standard uncoupled simulation, our coupled results show better agreement with measurements. We use the remaining measurement-model differences to identify sources and sinks that are over or underestimated in the model. We find underestimated OH fields when calculating the CH4 loss and CO production from CH4. Biomass burning emissions and secondary production are underestimated for CO in the Southern Hemisphere and we find enhanced anthropogenic sources in the Northern Hemisphere. We also find significantly stronger chemical production of CO2 in tropical land regions, especially in the Amazon. The model-measurement differences also highlight biases in the calculation of CH4 in the stratosphere and in vertical mixing that impacts all three gases.


PLoS ONE ◽  
2016 ◽  
Vol 11 (2) ◽  
pp. e0149937 ◽  
Author(s):  
Gail L. Chmura ◽  
Lisa Kellman ◽  
Lee van Ardenne ◽  
Glenn R. Guntenspergen

2021 ◽  
Vol 18 (11) ◽  
pp. 3529-3537
Author(s):  
Yanming Gong ◽  
Ping Yue ◽  
Kaihui Li ◽  
Anwar Mohammat ◽  
Yanyan Liu

Abstract. An experiment was conducted to investigate the effect of seasonally asymmetric warming on ecosystem respiration (Re), CH4 uptake, and N2O emissions in alpine grassland of the Tianshan of central Asia, from October 2016 to September 2019. The annual means of Re, CH4, and N2O fluxes in growing season were 42.83 mg C m−2 h−1, −41.57 µg C m−2 h−1, and 4.98 µg N m−2 h−1, respectively. Furthermore, warming during the non-growing season increased Re and CH4 uptake by 7.9 % and 10.6 % in the growing season and 10.5 % and 9.2 % in the non-growing season, respectively. However, the increase in N2O emission in the growing season was mainly caused by the warming during the growing season (by 29.7 %). The warming throughout the year and warming during the non-growing season increased N2O emissions by 101.9 % and 192.3 % in the non-growing season, respectively. The Re, CH4 uptake, and N2O emissions were positively correlated with soil temperature. Our results suggested that Re, CH4 uptake, and N2O emissions were regulated by soil temperature, rather than soil moisture, in the case of seasonally asymmetric warming. In addition, the response rate was defined by the changes in greenhouse gas fluxes driven by warming. In our field experiment, we observed the stimulatory effect of warming during the non-growing season on Re and CH4 uptake. In contrast, the response rates of Re and N2O emissions were gradually attenuated by long-term annual warming, and the response rate of Re was also weakened by warming over the growing season. These findings highlight the importance of warming in the non-growing season in regulating greenhouse gas fluxes, a finding which is crucial for improving our understanding of C and N cycles under the scenarios of global warming.


2022 ◽  
Vol 218 ◽  
pp. 105313
Author(s):  
Serdar Bilen ◽  
Pierre-Andre Jacinthe ◽  
Raj Shrestha ◽  
Sindhu Jagadamma ◽  
Toru Nakajima ◽  
...  

Author(s):  
Sunayan Saha ◽  
Paramjit Singh Minhas ◽  
Ramlal Choudhary

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