Carbon dioxide and methane fluxes from mounds of African fungus-growing termites
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Published:2023-10-04
Issue:19
Volume:20
Page:4029-4042
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ISSN:1726-4189
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Container-title:Biogeosciences
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language:en
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Short-container-title:Biogeosciences
Author:
Räsänen MattiORCID, Vesala Risto, Rönnholm Petri, Arppe Laura, Manninen Petra, Jylhä Markus, Rikkinen Jouko, Pellikka Petri, Rinne JanneORCID
Abstract
Abstract. Termites play an essential role in decomposing dead plant
material in tropical ecosystems and are thus major sources of gaseous C
emissions in many environments. In African savannas, fungus-growing termites
are among the ecologically most influential termite species. We studied the
gas exchange from mounds of two closely related fungus-growing species
(Macrotermes subhyalinus and M. michaelseni, respectively) in two habitats representing different vegetation types
(grassland, bushland) together with soil fluxes around the mounds. The
fluxes from active termite mounds varied from 120 to 2100 mg CO2–C m−2 h−1 for carbon dioxide (CO2) and from 0.06 to 3.7 mg CH4–C m−2 h−1 for methane (CH4) fluxes. Mound CO2 fluxes varied
seasonally with a 64 % decrease and 41 % increase in the fluxes from
the dry to wet season at the grassland and bushland sites, respectively. During
the wet season, the CO2 fluxes were significantly correlated with
termite mound volume. The diurnal measurements from two M. michaelseni mounds suggest that
the gas fluxes peak during the daytime, possibly reflecting changes in mound
internal air circulation. Soil fluxes of both CO2 and CH4 were
enhanced at up to 2 m distance from the mounds compared to the local soil
respiration, indicating that, in addition to mound ventilation structures, a
small proportion of the metabolic gases produced also leave the nest via
surrounding soils.
Publisher
Copernicus GmbH
Subject
Earth-Surface Processes,Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics
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