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Seasonal Controls of CO<sub>2</sub> and CH<sub>4</sub> Dynamics in a Temporarily Flooded Subtropical Wetland

45

Citations

90

References

2020

Year

Abstract

Abstract Subtropical and tropical wetlands play a prominent role in the global carbon (C) cycle; yet factors that influence their C fluxes remain uncertain. We collected measurements from a temporarily flooded subtropical wetland over 3 years to investigate environmental drivers impacting CO 2 and CH 4 fluxes. The wetland was a sink of CO 2 (−469 to −380 g C‐CO 2 · m −2 · year −1 ) and a source of CH 4 (25.1 to 32.1 g C‐CH 4 · m −2 · year −1 ) to the atmosphere. Dry season CH 4 emissions represented 41 to 49% of the annual budget, reflecting the importance of continuous CH 4 flux measurements. Gross primary productivity (GPP) increased with temperature and radiation, and the influence of VPD on GPP varied with soil inundation. Higher water tables decreased R eco and increased GPP, and a higher GPP in turn lead to enhanced R eco likely through enhancements of GPP on autotrophic respiration. This suggests that the impact of the water table on R eco depends on the cancelling effects of hydrology and GPP. Emissions of CH 4 increased with soil temperature, water table, and GPP until soils were inundated at which point temperature and GPP became the main drivers. Water table and temperature influenced GPP and CH 4 fluxes, and increases in GPP directly enhanced CH 4 emissions. In addition to impacting C fluxes directly through water table depth, hydrology also determined the hierarchy of the dominance of factors controlling C fluxes and their response. The positive climate forcing of subtropical wetlands may be dictated by plant‐mediated and climate interactions, with hydrological factors playing a major role in determining the greenhouse gas sink or source strength of subtropical wetlands.

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