Indirect nitrous oxide emissions from streams within the US Corn Belt scale with stream order

被引:138
作者
Turner, Peter A. [1 ]
Griffis, Timothy J. [1 ]
Lee, Xuhui [2 ,3 ]
Baker, John M. [1 ,4 ]
Venterea, Rodney T. [1 ,4 ]
Wood, Jeffrey D. [1 ]
机构
[1] Univ Minnesota, Dept Soil Water & Climate, St Paul, MN 55108 USA
[2] Yale Univ, Sch Forestry & Environm Studies, New Haven, CT 06511 USA
[3] Nanjing Univ Informat Sci & Technol, Yale Nanjing Univ Informat Sci & Technol Ctr Atmo, Nanjing 210044, Jiangsu, Peoples R China
[4] ARS, USDA, St Paul, MN 55108 USA
基金
美国海洋和大气管理局;
关键词
aquatic nitrous oxide fluxes; IPCC emission factors; river emission hotspots; regional emission upscaling; CARBON-DIOXIDE; NONLINEAR RESPONSE; HEADWATER STREAMS; DISSOLVED-OXYGEN; N2O EMISSIONS; RIVER; FLUXES; DENITRIFICATION; EXCHANGE; NETWORK;
D O I
10.1073/pnas.1503598112
中图分类号
O [数理科学和化学]; P [天文学、地球科学]; Q [生物科学]; N [自然科学总论];
学科分类号
07 ; 0710 ; 09 ;
摘要
N2O is an important greenhouse gas and the primary stratospheric ozone depleting substance. Its deleterious effects on the environment have prompted appeals to regulate emissions from agriculture, which represents the primary anthropogenic source in the global N2O budget. Successful implementation of mitigation strategies requires robust bottom-up inventories that are based on emission factors (EFs), simulation models, or a combination of the two. Top-down emission estimates, based on tall-tower and aircraft observations, indicate that bottom-up inventories severely underestimate regional and continental scale N2O emissions, implying that EFs may be biased low. Here, we measured N2O emissions from streams within the US Corn Belt using a chamber-based approach and analyzed the data as a function of Strahler stream order (S). N2O fluxes from headwater streams often exceeded 29 nmol N2O-N m(-2).s(-1) and decreased exponentially as a function of S. This relation was used to scale up riverine emissions and to assess the differences between bottom-up and top-down emission inventories at the local to regional scale. We found that the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC) indirect EF for rivers (EF5r) is underestimated up to ninefold in southern Minnesota, which translates to a total tier 1 agricultural underestimation of N2O emissions by 40%. We show that accounting for zero-order streams as potential N2O hotspots can more than double the agricultural budget. Applying the same analysis to the US Corn Belt demonstrates that the IPCC EF5r underestimation explains the large differences observed between top-down and bottom-up emission estimates.
引用
收藏
页码:9839 / 9843
页数:5
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