Effects of Water Table Fluctuation on Greenhouse Gas Emissions from Wetland Soils in the Peruvian Amazon

被引:0
作者
Jaan Pärn
Kaido Soosaar
Thomas Schindler
Katerina Machacova
Waldemar Alegría Muñoz
Lizardo Fachín
José Luis Jibaja Aspajo
Robinson I. Negron-Juarez
Martin Maddison
Jhon Rengifo
Danika Journeth Garay Dinis
Adriana Gabriela Arista Oversluijs
Manuel Calixto Ávila Fucos
Rafael Chávez Vásquez
Ronald Huaje Wampuch
Edgar Peas García
Kristina Sohar
Segundo Cordova Horna
Tedi Pacheco Gómez
Jose David Urquiza Muñoz
Rodil Tello Espinoza
Ülo Mander
机构
[1] University of Tartu,Department of Geography, Institute of Ecology and Earth Sciences
[2] Global Change Research Institute of the Czech Academy of Sciences,Department of Ecosystem Trace Gas Exchange
[3] National University of the Peruvian Amazon (UNAP),School of Forestry
[4] Peruvian Amazon Research Institute (IIAP),undefined
[5] Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory,undefined
[6] Max-Planck Institute for Biogeochemistry,undefined
来源
Wetlands | 2023年 / 43卷
关键词
Carbon dioxide; Greenhouse gas; Laughing gas; Methane; Nitrous oxide; Peat; Peatland; Tropical; Tropics;
D O I
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中图分类号
学科分类号
摘要
Amazonian swamp forests remove large amounts of carbon dioxide (CO2) but produce methane (CH4). Both are important greenhouse gases (GHG). Drought and cultivation cut the CH4 emissions but may release CO2. Varying oxygen content in nitrogen-rich soil produces nitrous oxide (N2O), which is the third most important GHG. Despite the potentially tremendous changes, GHG emissions from wetland soils under different land uses and environmental conditions have rarely been compared in the Amazon. We measured environmental characteristics, and CO2, CH4 and N2O emissions from the soil surface with manual opaque chambers in three sites near Iquitos, Peru from September 2019 to March 2020: a pristine peat swamp forest, a young forest and a slash-and-burn manioc field. The manioc field showed moderate soil respiration and N2O emission. The peat swamp forests under slight water table drawdown emitted large amounts of CO2 and CH4. A heavy post-drought shower created a hot moment of N2O in the pristine swamp forest, likely produced by nitrifiers. All in all, even small changes in soil moisture can create hot moments of GHG emissions from Amazonian wetland soils, and should therefore be carefully monitored.
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