Environmental factors controlling methane emissions from peatlands in northern Minnesota
- 20 June 1993
- journal article
- Published by American Geophysical Union (AGU) in Journal of Geophysical Research: Atmospheres
- Vol. 98 (D6) , 10583-10594
- https://doi.org/10.1029/93jd00160
Abstract
Controls on methane emission from peatlands in northern Minnesota were investigated by correlation to environmental variables and by field manipulation. From September 1988 through September 1990, methane flux measurements were made at weekly to monthly intervals at six sites in the Marcell Experimental Forest, northern Minnesota (two open bog sites, two forested bog sites, a poor fen, and a fen lagg). Flux was related to water table position and peat temperature with simple correlations at individual sites and multiple regression on all sites together. The effect of water table was also investigated experimentally in “bog corrals” (open‐ended metal enclosures set in the peat) in which water table was artificially raised to the surface in the driest peatland. Temperature largely controlled variation in flux within individual ecosystems at Marcell, but hydrology distinguished between‐site variation. Water table position, peat temperature, and degree of peat humification explained 91% of the variance in log CH4 flux, predicted annual methane emission from individual wetlands successfully, and predicted the change in flux due to the water table manipulation. Raising the water table in the bog corrals by an average of 6 cm in autumn 1989 and 10 cm in summer 1990 increased emission by 2.5x and 2.2x, respectively. Just as expanding the scale of investigation from a single habitat in a wetland to several wetlands necessitates incorporation of additional variables to explain flux (water table, peat characteristics), modeling flux from several wetland regions, if possible, will require the addition of climate parameters.Keywords
This publication has 25 references indexed in Scilit:
- Methane emission from Minnesota peatlands: Spatial and seasonal variabilityGlobal Biogeochemical Cycles, 1993
- Interannual variations in tundra methane emission: A 4‐year time series at fixed sitesGlobal Biogeochemical Cycles, 1992
- Eddy correlation measurements of methane flux in a northern peatland ecosystemBoundary-Layer Meteorology, 1992
- Spatial and temporal variations of methane flux from subarctic/northern boreal fensGlobal Biogeochemical Cycles, 1990
- Methane flux from Minnesota PeatlandsGlobal Biogeochemical Cycles, 1988
- Biogeochemical aspects of atmospheric methaneGlobal Biogeochemical Cycles, 1988
- Methane Emissions to the Atmosphere Through Aquatic PlantsJournal of Environmental Quality, 1985
- Methane flux in forested freshwater swamps of the southeastern United StatesGeophysical Research Letters, 1981
- COMPARISONS OF FOUR METHODS FOR DETERMINATION OF DEGREE OF PEAT HUMIFICATION (DECOMPOSITION) WITH EMPHASIS ON THE VON POST METHODCanadian Journal of Soil Science, 1977
- Streamflow Chemistry and Nutrient Yields from Upland-Peatland Watersheds in MinnesotaEcology, 1975