Methane fluxes from waterlogged and drained histosols of highland areas.

Soil can be either source or sink of methane (CH4), depending on the balance between methanogenesis and methanotrophy, which are determined by pedological, climatic and management factors. The objective of this study was to assess the impact of drainage of a highland Haplic Histosol on CH4 fluxes. Field research was carried out in Ponta Grossa (Paraná, Brazil) based on the measurement of CH4 fluxes by the static chamber method in natural and drained Histosol, over one year (17 sampling events). The natural Histosol showed net CH4 eflux, with rates varying from 238 ?g m-2 h-1 CH4, in cool/cold periods, to 2,850 ?g m-2 h-1 CH4, in warm/hot periods, resulting a cumulative emission of 116 kg ha-1 yr-1 CH4. In the opposite, the drained Histosol showed net influx of CH4 (-39 to -146 ?g m-2 h-1), which resulted in a net consumption of 9 kg ha-1 yr-1 CH4. The main driving factors of CH4 consumption in the drained soil were the lowering of the water-table (on average -57 cm, vs -7 cm in natural soil) and the lower water content in the 0-10 cm layer (average of 5.5 kg kg-1, vs 9.9 kg kg-1 in natural soil). Although waterlogged Histosols of highland areas are regarded as CH4 sources, they fulfill fundamental functions in the ecosystem, such as the accumulation of organic carbon (581 Mg ha-1 C to a depth of 1 m) and water (8.6 million L ha-1 = 860 mm to a depth of 1 m). For this reason, these soils must not be drained as an alternative to mitigate CH4 emission, but effectively preserved.

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Main Authors: RACHWAL, M. F. G., ZANATTA, J. A., DIECKOW, J., DENEGA, G. L., CURCIO, G. R., BAYER, C.
Other Authors: MARCOS FERNANDO GLUCK RACHWAL, CNPF; JOSILEIA ACORDI ZANATTA, CNPF; JEFERSON DIECKOW, UFPR; GENUIR LUIS DENEGA, Estudande de doutorado UFRGS; GUSTAVO RIBAS CURCIO, CNPF; CIMELIO BAYER, Professor UFRGS.
Format: Separatas biblioteca
Language:English
eng
Published: 2014-07-07
Subjects:Gases de efeito estufa, Nível freático, Umidade gravimétrica, Temperatura do ar, Precipitação pluviométrica., Água.,
Online Access:http://www.alice.cnptia.embrapa.br/alice/handle/doc/989988
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spelling dig-alice-doc-9899882017-08-16T00:43:29Z Methane fluxes from waterlogged and drained histosols of highland areas. RACHWAL, M. F. G. ZANATTA, J. A. DIECKOW, J. DENEGA, G. L. CURCIO, G. R. BAYER, C. MARCOS FERNANDO GLUCK RACHWAL, CNPF; JOSILEIA ACORDI ZANATTA, CNPF; JEFERSON DIECKOW, UFPR; GENUIR LUIS DENEGA, Estudande de doutorado UFRGS; GUSTAVO RIBAS CURCIO, CNPF; CIMELIO BAYER, Professor UFRGS. Gases de efeito estufa Nível freático Umidade gravimétrica Temperatura do ar Precipitação pluviométrica. Água. Soil can be either source or sink of methane (CH4), depending on the balance between methanogenesis and methanotrophy, which are determined by pedological, climatic and management factors. The objective of this study was to assess the impact of drainage of a highland Haplic Histosol on CH4 fluxes. Field research was carried out in Ponta Grossa (Paraná, Brazil) based on the measurement of CH4 fluxes by the static chamber method in natural and drained Histosol, over one year (17 sampling events). The natural Histosol showed net CH4 eflux, with rates varying from 238 ?g m-2 h-1 CH4, in cool/cold periods, to 2,850 ?g m-2 h-1 CH4, in warm/hot periods, resulting a cumulative emission of 116 kg ha-1 yr-1 CH4. In the opposite, the drained Histosol showed net influx of CH4 (-39 to -146 ?g m-2 h-1), which resulted in a net consumption of 9 kg ha-1 yr-1 CH4. The main driving factors of CH4 consumption in the drained soil were the lowering of the water-table (on average -57 cm, vs -7 cm in natural soil) and the lower water content in the 0-10 cm layer (average of 5.5 kg kg-1, vs 9.9 kg kg-1 in natural soil). Although waterlogged Histosols of highland areas are regarded as CH4 sources, they fulfill fundamental functions in the ecosystem, such as the accumulation of organic carbon (581 Mg ha-1 C to a depth of 1 m) and water (8.6 million L ha-1 = 860 mm to a depth of 1 m). For this reason, these soils must not be drained as an alternative to mitigate CH4 emission, but effectively preserved. 2014-07-07T11:11:11Z 2014-07-07T11:11:11Z 2014-07-07 2014 2015-02-18T11:11:11Z Separatas Revista Brasileira de Ciência do Solo, v. 38, p. 486-494, 2014. http://www.alice.cnptia.embrapa.br/alice/handle/doc/989988 en eng openAccess
institution EMBRAPA
collection DSpace
country Brasil
countrycode BR
component Bibliográfico
access En linea
databasecode dig-alice
tag biblioteca
region America del Sur
libraryname Sistema de bibliotecas de EMBRAPA
language English
eng
topic Gases de efeito estufa
Nível freático
Umidade gravimétrica
Temperatura do ar
Precipitação pluviométrica.
Água.
Gases de efeito estufa
Nível freático
Umidade gravimétrica
Temperatura do ar
Precipitação pluviométrica.
Água.
spellingShingle Gases de efeito estufa
Nível freático
Umidade gravimétrica
Temperatura do ar
Precipitação pluviométrica.
Água.
Gases de efeito estufa
Nível freático
Umidade gravimétrica
Temperatura do ar
Precipitação pluviométrica.
Água.
RACHWAL, M. F. G.
ZANATTA, J. A.
DIECKOW, J.
DENEGA, G. L.
CURCIO, G. R.
BAYER, C.
Methane fluxes from waterlogged and drained histosols of highland areas.
description Soil can be either source or sink of methane (CH4), depending on the balance between methanogenesis and methanotrophy, which are determined by pedological, climatic and management factors. The objective of this study was to assess the impact of drainage of a highland Haplic Histosol on CH4 fluxes. Field research was carried out in Ponta Grossa (Paraná, Brazil) based on the measurement of CH4 fluxes by the static chamber method in natural and drained Histosol, over one year (17 sampling events). The natural Histosol showed net CH4 eflux, with rates varying from 238 ?g m-2 h-1 CH4, in cool/cold periods, to 2,850 ?g m-2 h-1 CH4, in warm/hot periods, resulting a cumulative emission of 116 kg ha-1 yr-1 CH4. In the opposite, the drained Histosol showed net influx of CH4 (-39 to -146 ?g m-2 h-1), which resulted in a net consumption of 9 kg ha-1 yr-1 CH4. The main driving factors of CH4 consumption in the drained soil were the lowering of the water-table (on average -57 cm, vs -7 cm in natural soil) and the lower water content in the 0-10 cm layer (average of 5.5 kg kg-1, vs 9.9 kg kg-1 in natural soil). Although waterlogged Histosols of highland areas are regarded as CH4 sources, they fulfill fundamental functions in the ecosystem, such as the accumulation of organic carbon (581 Mg ha-1 C to a depth of 1 m) and water (8.6 million L ha-1 = 860 mm to a depth of 1 m). For this reason, these soils must not be drained as an alternative to mitigate CH4 emission, but effectively preserved.
author2 MARCOS FERNANDO GLUCK RACHWAL, CNPF; JOSILEIA ACORDI ZANATTA, CNPF; JEFERSON DIECKOW, UFPR; GENUIR LUIS DENEGA, Estudande de doutorado UFRGS; GUSTAVO RIBAS CURCIO, CNPF; CIMELIO BAYER, Professor UFRGS.
author_facet MARCOS FERNANDO GLUCK RACHWAL, CNPF; JOSILEIA ACORDI ZANATTA, CNPF; JEFERSON DIECKOW, UFPR; GENUIR LUIS DENEGA, Estudande de doutorado UFRGS; GUSTAVO RIBAS CURCIO, CNPF; CIMELIO BAYER, Professor UFRGS.
RACHWAL, M. F. G.
ZANATTA, J. A.
DIECKOW, J.
DENEGA, G. L.
CURCIO, G. R.
BAYER, C.
format Separatas
topic_facet Gases de efeito estufa
Nível freático
Umidade gravimétrica
Temperatura do ar
Precipitação pluviométrica.
Água.
author RACHWAL, M. F. G.
ZANATTA, J. A.
DIECKOW, J.
DENEGA, G. L.
CURCIO, G. R.
BAYER, C.
author_sort RACHWAL, M. F. G.
title Methane fluxes from waterlogged and drained histosols of highland areas.
title_short Methane fluxes from waterlogged and drained histosols of highland areas.
title_full Methane fluxes from waterlogged and drained histosols of highland areas.
title_fullStr Methane fluxes from waterlogged and drained histosols of highland areas.
title_full_unstemmed Methane fluxes from waterlogged and drained histosols of highland areas.
title_sort methane fluxes from waterlogged and drained histosols of highland areas.
publishDate 2014-07-07
url http://www.alice.cnptia.embrapa.br/alice/handle/doc/989988
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