Methane flux from Minnesota Peatlands
- 1 December 1988
- journal article
- Published by American Geophysical Union (AGU) in Global Biogeochemical Cycles
- Vol. 2 (4) , 371-384
- https://doi.org/10.1029/gb002i004p00371
Abstract
Northern (>40°N) wetlands have been suggested as the largest natural source of methane (CH4) to the troposphere. To refine our estimates of source strengths from this region and to investigate climatic controls on the process, fluxes were measured from a variety of Minnesota peatlands during May, June, and August 1986. Sites included forested and unforested ombrotrophic bogs and minerotrophic fens in and near the U.S. Department of Agriculture Marcell Experimental Forest and the Red Lake peatlands. Late spring and summer fluxes ranged from 11 to 866 mg CH4 m−2 d−1, averaging 207 mg CH4 m−2 d−1 overall. At Marcell Forest, forested bogs and fen sites had lower fluxes (averages of 77 ± 21 mg CH4 m−2 d−1 and 142 ± 19 mg CH4 m−2 d−1) than open bogs (average of 294 ± 30 mg CH4 m−2 d−1). In the Red Lake peatland, circumneutral fens, with standing water above the peat surface, produced more methane than acid bog sites in which the water table was beneath the moss surface (325 ± 31 and 102 ± 13 mg CH4 m−2 d−1, respectively). Peat temperature was an important control. Methane flux increased in response to increasing soil temperature. For example, the open bog in the Marcell Forest with the highest CH4 flux exhibited a 74‐fold increase in flux over a three‐fold increase in temperature. We estimate that the methane flux from all peatlands north of 40° may be on the order of 70 to 90 Tg/yr though estimates of this sort are plagued by uncertainties in the areal extent of peatlands, length of the CH4 producing season, and the spatial and temporal variability of the flux.Keywords
This publication has 48 references indexed in Scilit:
- Methane concentration in the glacial atmosphere was only half that of the preindustrial HoloceneNature, 1988
- Climate‐chemical interactions and effects of changing atmospheric trace gasesReviews of Geophysics, 1987
- METHANE AND CARBON DIOXIDE EVOLUTION FROM SUBARCTIC FENSCanadian Journal of Soil Science, 1987
- Raised bogs in eastern North America: transitions in landforms and gross stratigraphyCanadian Journal of Botany, 1986
- Concentration of methane in the troposphere deduced from 1951 infrared solar spectraNature, 1985
- Increase of Atmospheric Methane Recorded in Antarctic Ice CoreScience, 1985
- Phosphorus Cycling in Alaskan Coastal Tundra: A Hypothesis for the Regulation of Nutrient CyclingOikos, 1978
- Methane flux from wetlands areasTellus, 1977
- Peat Temperature Regime of a Minnesota Bog and the Effect of Canopy RemovalJournal of Applied Ecology, 1976
- Streamflow Chemistry and Nutrient Yields from Upland-Peatland Watersheds in MinnesotaEcology, 1975