Radiation and temperature drive diurnal variation of aerobic methane emissions from Scots pine canopy

Author:

Kohl Lukas123ORCID,Tenhovirta Salla A. M.12ORCID,Koskinen Markku12ORCID,Putkinen Anuliina124,Haikarainen Iikka12,Polvinen Tatu12,Galeotti Luca12,Mammarella Ivan5,Siljanen Henri M. P.36ORCID,Robson Thomas Matthew78ORCID,Adamczyk Bartosz9,Pihlatie Mari1210ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Department of Agricultural Sciences, Faculty of Agriculture and Forestry, University of Helsinki, Helsinki 00790, Finland

2. Institute for Atmosphere and Earth System Research/Forest Sciences, Faculty of Agriculture and Forestry, University of Helsinki, Helsinki 00790, Finland

3. Department of Environmental and Biological Sciences, University of Eastern Finland, Kuopio 70600, Finland

4. Department of Microbiology, Faculty of Agriculture and Forestry, University of Helsinki, Helsinki 00790, Finland

5. Institute for Atmosphere and Earth System Research/Physics, Faculty of Science, University of Helsinki, Helsinki 00560, Finland

6. Archaea Biology and Ecogenomics Unit, Department of Functional and Evolutionary Ecology, University of Vienna, Vienna 1030, Austria

7. National School of Forestry, University of Cumbria, Ambleside LA22 9BB, United Kingdom

8. Organismal and Evolutionary Biology (OEB), Faculty of Biological and Environmental Science, University of Helsinki, Helsinki 00790, Finland

9. Natural Resources Institute Finland (Luke), Helsinki 00790, Finland

10. Viikki Plant Science Center, University of Helsinki, Helsinki 00790, Finland

Abstract

Methane emissions from plant foliage may play an important role in the global methane cycle, but their size and the underlying source processes remain poorly understood. Here, we quantify methane fluxes from the shoots of Scots pine trees, a dominant tree species in boreal forests, to identify source processes and environmental drivers, and we evaluate whether these fluxes can be constrained at the ecosystem-level by eddy covariance flux measurements. We show that shoot-level measurements conducted in forest, garden, or greenhouse settings; on mature trees and saplings; manually and with an automated CO 2 -, temperature-, and water-controlled chamber system; and with multiple methane analyzers all resulted in comparable daytime fluxes (0.144 ± 0.019 to 0.375 ± 0.074 nmol CH 4 g −1 foliar d.w. h −1 ). We further find that these emissions exhibit a pronounced diurnal cycle that closely follows photosynthetically active radiation and is further modulated by temperature. These diurnal patterns indicate that methane production is associated with diurnal cycle of sunlight, indicating that this production is either a byproduct of photosynthesis-associated biochemical reactions (e.g., the methionine cycle) or produced through nonenzymatic photochemical reactions in plant biomass. Moreover, we identified a light-dependent component in stand-level methane fluxes, which showed order-of-magnitude agreement with shoot-level measurements (0.968 ± 0.031 nmol CH 4 g −1 h −1 ) and which provides an upper limit for shoot methane emissions.

Funder

EC | European Research Council

Academy of Finland

EC | Horizon 2020 Framework Programme

Publisher

Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences

Subject

Multidisciplinary

Reference57 articles.

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5. Pinus sylvestris as a missing source of nitrous oxide and methane in boreal forest

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