Publication | Open Access
Vertical Hydrologic Exchange Flows Control Methane Emissions from Riverbed Sediments
39
Citations
56
References
2023
Year
CH<sub>4</sub> emissions from inland waters are highly uncertain in the current global CH<sub>4</sub> budget, especially for streams, rivers, and other lotic systems. Previous studies have attributed the strong spatiotemporal heterogeneity of riverine CH<sub>4</sub> to environmental factors such as sediment type, water level, temperature, or particulate organic carbon abundance through correlation analysis. However, a mechanistic understanding of the basis for such heterogeneity is lacking. Here, we combine sediment CH<sub>4</sub> data from the Hanford reach of the Columbia River with a biogeochemical-transport model to show that vertical hydrologic exchange flows (VHEFs), driven by the difference between river stage and groundwater level, determine CH<sub>4</sub> flux at the sediment-water interface. CH<sub>4</sub> fluxes show a nonlinear relationship with the magnitude of VHEFs, where high VHEFs introduce O<sub>2</sub> into riverbed sediments, which inhibit CH<sub>4</sub> production and induce CH<sub>4</sub> oxidation, and low VHEFs cause transient reduction in CH<sub>4</sub> flux (relative to production) due to reduced advective CH<sub>4</sub> transport. In addition, VHEFs lead to the hysteresis of temperature rise and CH<sub>4</sub> emissions because high river discharge caused by snowmelt in spring leads to strong downwelling flow that offsets increasing CH<sub>4</sub> production with temperature rise. Our findings reveal how the interplay between in-stream hydrologic flux besides fluvial-wetland connectivity and microbial metabolic pathways that compete with methanogenic pathways can produce complex patterns in CH<sub>4</sub> production and emission in riverbed alluvial sediments.
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