Abstract
Abstract. Relationships between methane (CH4) fluxes and environmental conditions
have been extensively explored in saturated soils, while
research has been less prevalent in aerated soils because of the relatively
small magnitudes of CH4 fluxes that occur in dry soils.
Our study builds on previous carbon cycle research at Tenderfoot
Creek Experimental Forest, Montana, to identify how environmental conditions
reflected by topographic metrics can be leveraged to estimate watershed scale
CH4 fluxes from point scale measurements. Here, we measured soil
CH4 concentrations and fluxes across a range of landscape positions (7 riparian, 25 upland),
utilizing topographic and seasonal (29 May–12 September) gradients to examine the relationships between
environmental variables, hydrologic dynamics, and CH4 emission and
uptake. Riparian areas emitted small fluxes of CH4 throughout the study
(median: 0.186 µg CH4–C m−2 h−1) and uplands increased
in sink strength with dry-down of the watershed (median: −22.9 µg CH4–C m−2 h−1). Locations with volumetric water content (VWC)
below 38 % were methane sinks, and uptake increased with decreasing VWC.
Above 43 % VWC, net CH4 efflux occurred, and at intermediate VWC net
fluxes were near zero. Riparian sites had near-neutral cumulative seasonal
flux, and cumulative uptake of CH4 in the uplands was significantly
related to topographic indices. These relationships were used to model the
net seasonal CH4 flux of the upper Stringer Creek watershed (−1.75 kg CH4–C ha−1). This spatially distributed estimate was 111 % larger
than that obtained by simply extrapolating the mean CH4 flux to the
entire watershed area. Our results highlight the importance of quantifying
the space–time variability of net CH4 fluxes as predicted by the
frequency distribution of landscape positions when assessing watershed scale
greenhouse gas balances.
Funder
National Science Foundation
Subject
Earth-Surface Processes,Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics
Cited by
22 articles.
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