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Parsing the variability in CH 4 flux at a spatially heterogeneous wetland: Integrating multiple eddy covariance towers with high‐resolution flux footprint analysis
Author(s) -
Matthes Jaclyn Hatala,
Sturtevant Cove,
Verfaillie Joseph,
Knox Sara,
Baldocchi Dennis
Publication year - 2014
Publication title -
journal of geophysical research: biogeosciences
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
eISSN - 2169-8961
pISSN - 2169-8953
DOI - 10.1002/2014jg002642
Subject(s) - eddy covariance , environmental science , flux (metallurgy) , atmospheric sciences , spatial variability , vegetation (pathology) , footprint , wetland , evapotranspiration , ecosystem , hydrology (agriculture) , ecology , geography , statistics , geology , mathematics , medicine , materials science , geotechnical engineering , archaeology , pathology , metallurgy , biology
Restored wetlands are a complex mosaic of open water and new and old emergent vegetation patches, where multiple environmental and biological drivers contribute to the measured heterogeneity in methane (CH 4 ) flux. In this analysis, we replicated the measurements of CH 4 flux using the eddy covariance technique at three tower locations within the same wetland site to parse the spatiotemporal variability in CH 4 flux contributed by large‐scale seasonal variations in climate and phenology and short‐term variations in flux footprint movement over a mosaic of vegetation and open water. Using a hierarchical statistical model accounting for site‐level environmental effects, tower‐level footprint and biological effects, and temporal autocorrelation, we partitioned the key drivers of the daily CH 4 flux variability among the three replicated towers. The daily mean air temperature and mean friction velocity, a measure of momentum transfer, explained a significant variability in CH 4 flux across the three towers, and the abundance and spatial aggregation of vegetation in the flux footprint along with the daily gross primary productivity explained much of the tower‐level variability. This statistical model captured 67% of the total variance in the daily integrated growing season CH 4 fluxes at this site, which bridged an order of magnitude from 80 to 480 mg C m −2 d −1 during the measurement period from 10 May 2012 to 24 October 2012.