Publication | Open Access
Short‐term response of methane fluxes and methanogen activity to water table and soil warming manipulations in an Alaskan peatland
264
Citations
80
References
2008
Year
EngineeringLowest FluxesEarth System ScienceEarth ScienceOrganic GeochemistryTerrestrial EcosystemTerrestrial EcologyMethanogen ActivityOceanic SystemsClimate ChangeSoil GasBiogeochemistryMethane FluxesBiogeochemical CycleSoil Biogeochemical CyclingClimate DynamicsEarth's ClimateMethanogen AbundancesBiogeochemical ProcessShort‐term Response
Growing season CH 4 fluxes were monitored over a two year period following the start of ecosystem‐scale manipulations of water table position and surface soil temperatures in a moderate rich fen in interior Alaska. The largest CH 4 fluxes occurred in plots that received both flooding (raised water table position) and soil warming, while the lowest fluxes occurred in unwarmed plots in the lowered water table treatment. A combination of treatment and soil hydroclimate variables explained more than 70% of the variation in ln‐transformed CH 4 fluxes, with mean daily water table position representing the strongest predictor. We used quantitative PCR of the α ‐subunit of mcr operon to explore the influence of soil climate manipulations on methanogen abundances. Methanogen abundances were greatest in warmed plots, and showed a positive relationship with mean daily CH 4 fluxes. Our results show that water table manipulations that led to soil inundation (flooding) had a stronger effect on CH 4 fluxes than water table drawdown. Seasonal CH 4 fluxes increased by 80–300% under the combined wetter and warmer soil climate treatments. Thus, while warming is expected to increase CH 4 emissions from Alaskan wetlands, higher water table positions caused by increases in precipitation or disturbances such as permafrost thaw that lead to thermokarst and flooding in wetlands will stimulate CH 4 emissions beyond the effects of soil warming alone. Consequently, we argue that modeling the effects of climate change on Alaskan wetland CH 4 emissions needs to consider the interactive effects of soil warming and water table position on CH 4 production and transport.
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