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  5. Methane fluxes in tidal marshes of the conterminous United States

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Article
en
2024

Methane fluxes in tidal marshes of the conterminous United States

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en
2024
Vol 30 (9)
Vol. 30
DOI: 10.1111/gcb.17462

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Dennis Baldocchi
Dennis Baldocchi

University of California, Berkeley

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Ariane Arias‐Ortiz
J. L. Wolfe
Scott D. Bridgham
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Abstract

Abstract Methane (CH 4 ) is a potent greenhouse gas (GHG) with atmospheric concentrations that have nearly tripled since pre‐industrial times. Wetlands account for a large share of global CH 4 emissions, yet the magnitude and factors controlling CH 4 fluxes in tidal wetlands remain uncertain. We synthesized CH 4 flux data from 100 chamber and 9 eddy covariance (EC) sites across tidal marshes in the conterminous United States to assess controlling factors and improve predictions of CH 4 emissions. This effort included creating an open‐source database of chamber‐based GHG fluxes ( https://doi.org/10.25573/serc.14227085 ). Annual fluxes across chamber and EC sites averaged 26 ± 53 g CH 4 m −2 year −1 , with a median of 3.9 g CH 4 m −2 year −1 , and only 25% of sites exceeding 18 g CH 4 m −2 year −1 . The highest fluxes were observed at fresh‐oligohaline sites with daily maximum temperature normals (MATmax) above 25.6°C. These were followed by frequently inundated low and mid‐fresh‐oligohaline marshes with MATmax ≤25.6°C, and mesohaline sites with MATmax >19°C. Quantile regressions of paired chamber CH 4 flux and porewater biogeochemistry revealed that the 90th percentile of fluxes fell below 5 ± 3 nmol m −2 s −1 at sulfate concentrations >4.7 ± 0.6 mM, porewater salinity >21 ± 2 psu, or surface water salinity >15 ± 3 psu. Across sites, salinity was the dominant predictor of annual CH 4 fluxes, while within sites, temperature, gross primary productivity (GPP), and tidal height controlled variability at diel and seasonal scales. At the diel scale, GPP preceded temperature in importance for predicting CH 4 flux changes, while the opposite was observed at the seasonal scale. Water levels influenced the timing and pathway of diel CH 4 fluxes, with pulsed releases of stored CH 4 at low to rising tide. This study provides data and methods to improve tidal marsh CH 4 emission estimates, support blue carbon assessments, and refine national and global GHG inventories.

How to cite this publication

Ariane Arias‐Ortiz, J. L. Wolfe, Scott D. Bridgham, Sara Knox, Gavin McNicol, Brian A. Needelman, Julie Shahan, Ellen Stuart‐Haëntjens, Lisamarie Windham‐Myers, Patricia Y. Oikawa, Dennis Baldocchi, Joshua S. Caplan, Margaret Capooci, Kenneth M. Czapla, R. Kyle Derby, Heida L. Diefenderfer, Inke Forbrich, Gina N. Groseclose, Jason K. Keller, Cheryl A. Kelley, Amr E. Keshta, Helena S. Kleiner, Ken W. Krauss, Robert R. Lane, Sarah K. Mack, Serena Moseman‐Valtierra, Thomas J. Mozdzer, Peter Mueller, Scott C. Neubauer, Genevieve L. Noyce, Karina V. R. Schäfer, Rebecca Sanders‐DeMott, Charles A. Schutte, Rodrigo Vargas, Nathaniel B. Weston, Benjamin J. Wilson, J. Patrick Megonigal, James R. Holmquist (2024). Methane fluxes in tidal marshes of the conterminous United States. , 30(9), DOI: https://doi.org/10.1111/gcb.17462.

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Publication Details

Type

Article

Year

2024

Authors

38

Datasets

0

Total Files

0

Language

en

DOI

https://doi.org/10.1111/gcb.17462

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