Abstract

During the austral summers of 1999 and 2000, we made measurements of methane and nitrous oxide fluxes from tundra soils in maritime Antarctica, using a static open chamber technique. N 2O and CH 4 fluxes from the non-ornithogenic moss soils averaged 0.8 and −8.7 μg m −2 h −1, respectively, in the summer of 1999 and 1.4 and 26.7 μg m −2 h −1, respectively, in the summer of 2000. N 2O flux from the ornithogenic soils was approximately two orders of magnitude greater than that from moss soils and averaged 89.7 μg m −2 h −1, and CH 4 flux was approximately one order of magnitude greater and averaged 227.9 μg m −2 h −1, indicating that high organic carbon and nitrogen compound of penguin droppings deposition in the soils resulted in high CH 4 and N 2O emissions as a result of biologic transformation. The relationships between the fluxes and environmental factors were discussed.

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