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Hydrologic profiling for greenhouse gas effluxes from natural grasslands in the prairie pothole region of Canada
Author(s) -
Creed Irena F.,
Miller Johnston,
Aldred David,
Adams Jennifer K.,
Spitale Salvatore,
Bourbonniere Rick A.
Publication year - 2013
Publication title -
journal of geophysical research: biogeosciences
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
eISSN - 2169-8961
pISSN - 2169-8953
DOI - 10.1002/jgrg.20050
Subject(s) - environmental science , global warming , greenhouse gas , climate change , hydrology (agriculture) , representative concentration pathways , arid , climate model , global change , atmospheric sciences , ecology , geology , geotechnical engineering , biology
Abstract The prairie pothole physiographic region of North America is likely to be affected by climate change, and it is important to establish its baseline global warming potential as a basis for assessing global change effects. This study estimated the hydrologic effects on soil greenhouse gas efflux during the growing season along hydrologic profiles within natural prairie potholes ranging from the southern to northern limits of the prairie pothole region within central Canada. Soil moisture was found to be an important driver of differences in soil efflux along the hydrologic profiles and along the south‐to‐north gradient. The position of peak cumulative soil efflux varied along the hydrologic profile, with the N 2 O peak occurring at the backslope, the CO 2 peaks at footslope and toeslope, and the CH 4 peaks at toeslope and surface waters. When cumulative soil efflux was converted to global warming potential (Mg CO 2 eq), the largest values were restricted to the narrow land‐water interface in the south but expanded to a broader area of the hillslope in the north. CO 2 was the major (> 95%) contributor to global warming potential. Omitting hydrologic controls on greenhouse gas fluxes from estimates of global warming potential led to substantial underestimates of the contributions of N 2 O and CH 4 . Arid regions in the south had smaller global warming potential than wetter regions in the north. If future climate projections for a warmer, drier climate in this region are realized, global warming potential from soil greenhouse gas fluxes will be smaller in this landscape, because the changing hydrologic conditions should result in a reduction of global warming potential from land surfaces, even as global warming potential from surface waters increases.