Abstract

Abstract. The atmospheric greenhouse gas (GHG) budget of a restored wetland in western Denmark was established for the years 2009–2011 from eddy covariance measurements of carbon dioxide (CO2) and methane (CH4) fluxes. The water table in the wetland, which was restored in 2002, was unregulated, and the vegetation height was limited through occasional grazing by cattle and grass cutting. The annual net CO2 uptake varied between 195 and 983 g m−2 and the annual net CH4 release varied between 11 and 17 g m−2. In all three years the wetland was a carbon sink and removed between 42 and 259 g C m−2 from the atmosphere. However, in terms of the full annual GHG budget (assuming that 1 g CH4 is equivalent to 25 g CO2 with respect to the greenhouse effect over a time horizon of 100 years) the wetland was a sink in 2009, a source in 2010 and neutral in 2011. Complementary observations of meteorological factors and management activities were used to explain the large inter-annual variations in the full atmospheric GHG budget of the wetland. The largest impact on the annual GHG fluxes, eventually defining their sign, came from site management through changes in grazing duration and animal stocking density. These changes accounted for half of the observed variability in the CO2 fluxes and about two thirds of the variability in CH4 fluxes. An unusually long period of snow cover in 2010 had the second largest effect on the annual CO2 flux, whose interannual variability was larger than that of the CH4 flux. Since integrated CO2 and CH4 flux data from restored wetlands are still very rare, it is concluded that more long-term flux measurements are needed to quantify the effects of ecosystem disturbance, in terms of management activities and exceptional weather patterns, on the atmospheric GHG budget more accurately.

Highlights

  • The exchange of greenhouse gases (GHG) such as carbon dioxide (CO2) and methane (CH4) between terrestrial ecosystems and the atmosphere affects the atmospheric concentration of these gases

  • The results indicate that more long-term studies of full GHG budgets from wetlands are needed because the interannual variability in radiative forcing of a specific land use type can be large where more than one GHG is affected and where different GHGs are controlled by different environmental factors

  • This case study has demonstrated that the annual CO2 fluxes above a restored wetland were mainly controlled by site management and growing season length and that the annual CH4 emissions depended strongly on grazing effects

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Summary

Introduction

The exchange of greenhouse gases (GHG) such as carbon dioxide (CO2) and methane (CH4) between terrestrial ecosystems and the atmosphere affects the atmospheric concentration of these gases. To enable a comparison of the climate effect of individual GHGs, their global warming potential (GWP) is often expressed in units of CO2 equivalents that would have the same radiative forcing effect over a time horizon of 100 yr (IPCC, 2007). In this way the full GHG budget of a land surface is quantified, and the climate effect of the individual gases can be compared. There are still uncertainties in these parameterisations, for example regarding the influence of the water table height in wet soils on ecosystem respiration (Lloyd, 2006; Parmentier et al, 2009) or regarding climatemanagement interactions, since managed grassland sites are Published by Copernicus Publications on behalf of the European Geosciences Union

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