Climatic variability, hydrologic anomaly, and methane emission can turn productive freshwater marshes into net carbon sources

Glob Chang Biol. 2015 Mar;21(3):1165-81. doi: 10.1111/gcb.12760. Epub 2014 Nov 26.

Abstract

Freshwater marshes are well-known for their ecological functions in carbon sequestration, but complete carbon budgets that include both methane (CH4 ) and lateral carbon fluxes for these ecosystems are rarely available. To the best of our knowledge, this is the first full carbon balance for a freshwater marsh where vertical gaseous [carbon dioxide (CO2 ) and CH4 ] and lateral hydrologic fluxes (dissolved and particulate organic carbon) have been simultaneously measured for multiple years (2011-2013). Carbon accumulation in the sediments suggested that the marsh was a long-term carbon sink and accumulated ~96.9 ± 10.3 (±95% CI) g C m(-2) yr(-1) during the last ~50 years. However, abnormal climate conditions in the last 3 years turned the marsh to a source of carbon (42.7 ± 23.4 g C m(-2) yr(-1) ). Gross ecosystem production and ecosystem respiration were the two largest fluxes in the annual carbon budget. Yet, these two fluxes compensated each other to a large extent and led to the marsh being a CO2 sink in 2011 (-78.8 ± 33.6 g C m(-2) yr(-1) ), near CO2 -neutral in 2012 (29.7 ± 37.2 g C m(-2) yr(-1) ), and a CO2 source in 2013 (92.9 ± 28.0 g C m(-2) yr(-1) ). The CH4 emission was consistently high with a three-year average of 50.8 ± 1.0 g C m(-2) yr(-1) . Considerable hydrologic carbon flowed laterally both into and out of the marsh (108.3 ± 5.4 and 86.2 ± 10.5 g C m(-2) yr(-1) , respectively). In total, hydrologic carbon fluxes contributed ~23 ± 13 g C m(-2) yr(-1) to the three-year carbon budget. Our findings highlight the importance of lateral hydrologic inflows/outflows in wetland carbon budgets, especially in those characterized by a flow-through hydrologic regime. In addition, different carbon fluxes responded unequally to climate variability/anomalies and, thus, the total carbon budgets may vary drastically among years.

Keywords: carbon budget; carbon dioxide; carbon sequestration; dissolved organic carbon; eddy-covariance; methane; particulate organic carbon.

Publication types

  • Research Support, Non-U.S. Gov't
  • Research Support, U.S. Gov't, Non-P.H.S.

MeSH terms

  • Carbon Cycle*
  • Climate*
  • Fresh Water*
  • Hydrology
  • Methane / analysis*
  • Ohio
  • Seasons
  • Wetlands*

Substances

  • Methane