Abstract

Abstract. Pristine boreal mires are known as substantial sinks of carbon dioxide (CO2) and net emitters of methane (CH4). Bogs constitute a major fraction of pristine boreal mires. However, the bog CO2 and CH4 balances are poorly known, having been largely estimated based on discrete and short-term measurements by manual chambers and seldom using the eddy-covariance (EC) technique. Eddy-covariance (EC) measurements of CO2 and CH4 exchange were conducted in the Siikaneva mire complex in southern Finland in 2011–2016. The site is a patterned bog having a moss–sedge–shrub vegetation typical of southern Eurasian taiga, with several ponds near the EC tower. The study presents a complete series of CO2 and CH4 EC flux (FCH4) measurements and identifies the environmental factors controlling the ecosystem–atmosphere CO2 and CH4 exchange. A 6-year average growing season (May–September) cumulative CO2 exchange of −61 ± 24 g C m−2 was observed, which partitions into mean total respiration (Re) of 167 ± 33 (interannual range 146–197) g C m−2 and mean gross primary production (GPP) of 228 ± 46 (interannual range 193–257) g C m−2, while the corresponding FCH4 amounts to 7.1 ± 0.7 (interannual range 6.4–8.4) g C m−2. The contribution of October–December CO2 and CH4 fluxes to the cumulative sums was not negligible based on the measurements during one winter. GPP, Re and FCH4 increased with temperature. GPP and FCH4 did not show any significant decline even after a substantial water table drawdown in 2011. Instead, GPP, Re and FCH4 were limited in the cool, cloudy and wet growing season of 2012. May–September cumulative net ecosystem exchange (NEE) of 2013–2016 averaged at about −73 g C m−2, in contrast with the hot and dry year 2011 and the wet and cool year 2012. Suboptimal weather likely reduced the net sink by about 25 g C m−2 in 2011 due to elevated Re, and by about 40 g C m−2 in 2012 due to limited GPP. The cumulative growing season sums of GPP and CH4 emission showed a strong positive relationship. The EC source area was found to be comprised of eight distinct surface types. However, footprint analyses revealed that contributions of different surface types varied only within 10 %–20 % with respect to wind direction and stability conditions. Consequently, no clear link between CO2 and CH4 fluxes and the EC footprint composition was found despite the apparent variation in fluxes with wind direction.

Highlights

  • Natural mires are an important element of the boreal and Arctic carbon cycle due to the vast amounts of carbon stored in peat and their sensitivity to environmental changes (Gorham, 1991; Charman et al, 2013)

  • The average growing season CO2 and CH4 cumulative fluxes in the southern Finnish bog Siikaneva-2 are within the range of the previous estimates for other boreal bogs

  • −61 ± 24 g C m−2, which splits into 167 ± 33 g C m−2 of Re and 228 ± 46 g C m−2 of gross primary production (GPP), whereas the cumulative net CH4 efflux is 7.2 ± 0.7 g C m−2

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Summary

Introduction

Natural mires are an important element of the boreal and Arctic carbon cycle due to the vast amounts of carbon stored in peat and their sensitivity to environmental changes (Gorham, 1991; Charman et al, 2013). Over the last 10–14 thousand years, the northern mires have provided substantial climatic cooling (Frolking and Roulet, 2007) It is expected, that the rising air temperature will likely drive an increase in the emission of methane (CH4) (Zhang et al, 2017) and carbon dioxide (CO2) (Laine et al 2019). I.e. primarily rain-fed, oligotrophic peatlands with a developed microtopography and often populated by trees, constitute a major and diverse class of boreal mires (Seppä 2002). The response of their greenhouse gas (GHG) balances to the environment is of utmost interest. It would be of high interest to examine a multiannual EC record from a bog site

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