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Biennial GHG budget of a riparian forest: From soil and tree-stem to ecosystem level

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    SYSNO ASEP0518441
    Document TypeA - Abstract
    R&D Document TypeThe record was not marked in the RIV
    R&D Document TypeNení vybrán druh dokumentu
    TitleBiennial GHG budget of a riparian forest: From soil and tree-stem to ecosystem level
    Author(s) Mander, Ü. (EE)
    Schindler, T. (DE)
    Krasnova, A. (EE)
    Macháčová, Kateřina (UEK-B) RID, ORCID, SAI
    Pärn, J. (EE)
    Soosaar, K. (EE)
    Source TitleAGU Fall Meeting. - Washington : American Geophysical Union, 2019
    Number of pages1 s.
    ActionAGU Fall Meeting 2019
    Event date09.12.2019 - 13.12.2019
    VEvent locationSan Francisco
    CountryUS - United States
    Event typeWRD
    Languageeng - English
    CountryUS - United States
    Keywordsmethane ; nitrous oxide ; carbon dioxide ; ch4 ; n2o ; co2 ; nitrogen ; carbon ; emitter ; source ; sink ; greenhouse gas budget ; riparian alder forest ; tree stems ; soil ; canopy ; chamber ; eddy covariance ; losses
    Subject RIVGK - Forestry
    OECD categoryForestry
    Institutional supportUEK-B - RVO:86652079
    AnnotationRiparian forests sequester carbon dioxide (CO2 ) but little is known about the methane (CH4 ) and nitrous oxide (N2O) balance in the forests. Trees themselves can emit CH4 and the vegetation can be a significant CH4 source. Few studies show that drained nitrogen-rich organic soils under deciduous forests can be significant N2O sources. Grey alder (Alnus incana) is a fast-growing tree with potential for short rotation forestry. Grey alder stands are considered as accumulators of carbon (C). Their symbiotic dinitrogen fixation ability makes alders important regulators of the nitrogen (N) cycle. From July 2017 to July 2019 we measured budgets of CO2, CH4 and N2O of a 40-yr old riparian grey alder forest stand in Estonia using continuous measurements from the soil surface, samples from tree-stem chambers and continuous whole-ecosystem measurements (eddy covariance technique). Water level and soil temperature and moisture were measured automatically, and composite soil samples were taken for physico-chemical analysis. In the wet periods, stem flux of CH4 was the main source for ecosystem exchange, whereas in the dry periods, unexpectedly, ecosystem flux was significantly higher than fluxes from soil and tree stems. Most likely, canopy was the main CH4 emitter. N2O fluxes from the soil and stems were low during the dry periods and peaked during the wet periods and the freezing-thawing. The forest was a net annual source of both CH4 and N2O (6.33±0.29 kg CH4 ha-1 and 3.42±0.12 kg N2O ha-1, mean±SE) and a net annual sink of CO2 (-21,025±158 kg CO2 ha-1). Estimated average annual losses of total organic C and total N in groundwater were 7.5 kg C ha-1 and 1.8 kg N ha-1, thus the forest was a net annual C sink (-5,224 kg C ha-1). The total GHG budget shows that grey alder forests as pioneer communities, regardless of the CH4 fluxes, sequester large amounts C and improve soil-nutrient conditions.
    WorkplaceGlobal Change Research Institute
    ContactNikola Šviková, svikova.n@czechglobe.cz, Tel.: 511 192 268
    Year of Publishing2020
Number of the records: 1  

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