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Evaluation of laser‐based spectrometers for greenhouse gas flux measurements in coastal marshes

55

Citations

26

References

2016

Year

Abstract

Abstract Precise and rapid analyses of greenhouse gases (GHGs) will advance understanding of the net climatic forcing of coastal marsh ecosystems. We examined the ability of a cavity ring down spectroscopy (CRDS) analyzer (Model G2508, Picarro) to measure carbon dioxide (CO 2 ), methane (CH 4 ), and nitrous oxide (N 2 O) fluxes in real‐time from coastal marshes through comparisons with a Shimadzu GC‐2014 (GC) in a marsh mesocosm experiment and with a similar laser‐based N 2 O analyzer (Model N 2 O/CO, Los Gatos Research) in both mesocosm and field experiments. Minimum (analytical) detectable fluxes for all gases were more than one order of magnitude lower for the Picarro than the GC. In mesocosms, the Picarro analyzer detected several CO 2 , CH 4 , and N 2 O fluxes that the GC could not, but larger N 2 O fluxes (218–409 μmol m −2 h −1 ) were similar between analyzers. Minimum detectable fluxes for the Picarro were 1 order of magnitude higher than the Los Gatos analyzer for N 2 O. The Picarro and Los Gatos N 2 O fluxes (3–132 μmol m −2 h −1 ) differed in two mesocosm nitrogen addition experiments, but were similar in a mesocosm with larger N 2 O fluxes (326–491 μmol m −2 h −1 ). In a field comparison, Picarro and Los Gatos N 2 O fluxes (13 ± 2 μmol m −2 h −1 ) differed in plots receiving low nitrogen loads but were similar in plots with higher nitrogen loads and fluxes roughly double in magnitude. Both the Picarro and Los Gatos analyzers offer efficient and precise alternatives to GC‐based methods, but the former uniquely enables simultaneous measurements of three major GHGs in coastal marshes.

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