Abstract

Abstract. The Arctic is exposed to even faster temperature changes than most other areas on Earth. Constantly increasing temperature will lead to thawing permafrost and changes in the methane (CH4) emissions from wetlands. One of the places exposed to those changes is the Abisko–Stordalen Mire in northern Sweden, where climate and vegetation studies have been conducted since the 1970s. In our study, we analyzed field-scale methane emissions measured by the eddy covariance method at Abisko–Stordalen Mire for 3 years (2014–2016). The site is a subarctic mire mosaic of palsas, thawing palsas, fully thawed fens, and open water bodies. A bimodal wind pattern prevalent at the site provides an ideal opportunity to measure mire patches with different permafrost status with one flux measurement system. The flux footprint for westerly winds was dominated by elevated palsa plateaus, while the footprint was almost equally distributed between palsas and thawing bog-like areas for easterly winds. As these patches are exposed to the same climatic and weather conditions, we analyzed the differences in the responses of their methane emission for environmental parameters. The methane fluxes followed a similar annual cycle over the 3 study years, with a gentle rise during spring and a decrease during autumn, without emission bursts at either end of the ice-free season. The peak emission during the ice-free season differed significantly for the two mire areas with different permafrost status: the palsa mire emitted 19 mg-C m−2 d−1 and the thawing wet sector 40 mg-C m−2 d−1. Factors controlling the methane emission were analyzed using generalized linear models. The main driver for methane fluxes was peat temperature for both wind sectors. Soil water content above the water table emerged as an explanatory variable for the 3 years for western sectors and the year 2016 in the eastern sector. The water table level showed a significant correlation with methane emission for the year 2016 as well. Gross primary production, however, did not show a significant correlation with methane emissions. Annual methane emissions were estimated based on four different gap-filing methods. The different methods generally resulted in very similar annual emissions. The mean annual emission based on all models was 3.1 ± 0.3 g-C m−2 a−1 for the western sector and 5.5 ± 0.5 g-C m−2 a−1 for the eastern sector. The average annual emissions, derived from these data and a footprint climatology, were 2.7 ± 0.5 and 8.2 ± 1.5 g-C m−2 a−1 for the palsa and thawing surfaces, respectively. Winter fluxes were relatively high, contributing 27 %–45 % to the annual emissions.

Highlights

  • After a period of stabilization in the late 1990s to early 2000s, atmospheric methane (CH4) concentration is increasing again at rates similar to those before 1993, which is ap-Published by Copernicus Publications on behalf of the European Geosciences Union.P

  • The annual average peat temperature of the uppermost 50 cm of peat was systematically warmer in the eastern sector than in the western sector (Table 1; Fig. 3)

  • The situation was the opposite during winter when the western sector down to 50 cm was colder than the eastern sector

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Summary

Introduction

P. Łakomiec et al.: Field-scale CH4 emission at a subarctic mire proximately 12 ppb a−1 (Dlugokencky et al, 2011; Nisbet et al, 2014; Saunois et al, 2020). Łakomiec et al.: Field-scale CH4 emission at a subarctic mire proximately 12 ppb a−1 (Dlugokencky et al, 2011; Nisbet et al, 2014; Saunois et al, 2020) The reasons behind this increase are still partly unclear, as the mechanisms that control the global CH4 budget are not completely understood (Kirschke et al, 2013; Saunois et al, 2020). The shift in the isotopic composition of CH4 towards more negative values supports the hypothesis of changes in the biological source strength driving the increase in CH4 concentration, as atmospheric CH4 is becoming more 13C depleted (Nisbet et al, 2016)

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