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Carbon dioxide and methane emissions from an artificially drained coastal wetland during a flood: Implications for wetland global warming potential
Author(s) -
Gatland J. R.,
Santos I. R.,
Maher D. T.,
Duncan T. M.,
Erler D. V.
Publication year - 2014
Publication title -
journal of geophysical research: biogeosciences
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
eISSN - 2169-8961
pISSN - 2169-8953
DOI - 10.1002/2013jg002544
Subject(s) - environmental science , wetland , floodplain , hydrology (agriculture) , dissolved organic carbon , carbon dioxide , methane , water table , greenhouse gas , groundwater , surface water , flood myth , global warming , environmental chemistry , environmental engineering , climate change , geology , ecology , chemistry , oceanography , geotechnical engineering , biology , philosophy , theology
Floods frequently produce deoxygenation and acidification in waters of artificially drained coastal acid sulfate soil (CASS) wetlands. These conditions are ideal for carbon dioxide and methane production. We investigated CO 2 and CH 4 dynamics and quantified carbon loss within an artificially drained CASS wetland during and after a flood. We separated the system into wetland soils (inundated soil during flood and exposed soil during post flood period), drain water, and creek water and performed measurements of free CO 2 ([CO 2 *]), CH 4 , dissolved inorganic and organic carbon (DIC and DOC), stable carbon isotopes, and radon ( 222 Rn: natural tracer for groundwater discharge) to determine aquatic carbon loss pathways. [CO 2 *] and CH 4 values in the creek reached 721 and 81 μM, respectively, 2 weeks following a flood during a severe deoxygenation phase (dissolved oxygen ~ 0% saturation). CO 2 and CH 4 emissions from the floodplain to the atmosphere were 17‐fold and 170‐fold higher during the flooded period compared to the post‐flood period, respectively. CO 2 emissions accounted for about 90% of total floodplain mass carbon losses during both the flooded and post‐flood periods. Assuming a 20 and 100 year global warming potential (GWP) for CH 4 of 105 and 27 CO 2 ‐equivalents, CH 4 emission contributed to 85% and 60% of total floodplain CO 2‐ equivalent emissions, respectively. Stable carbon isotopes ( δ 13 C in dissolved CO 2 and CH 4 ) and 222 Rn indicated that carbon dynamics within the creek were more likely driven by drainage of surface floodwaters from the CASS wetland rather than groundwater seepage. This study demonstrated that >90% of CO 2 and CH 4 emissions from the wetland system occurred during the flood period and that the inundated wetland was responsible for ~95% of CO 2 ‐equivalent emissions over the floodplain.