Abstract

Although estimates of the annual methane (CH4) flux from agriculturally managed peatlands exist, knowledge of controls over the variation of CH4 at different time-scales is limited due to the lack of high temporal-resolution data. Here we present CH4 fluxes measured from May 2014 to April 2016 using the eddy covariance technique at an abandoned peatland pasture in western Newfoundland, Canada. The goals of the study were to identify the controls on the seasonal variations in CH4 flux and to quantify the annual CH4 flux. The seasonal variation in daily CH4 flux was not strong in the two study years, however a few periods of pronounced emissions occurred in the late growing season. The daily average CH4 flux was small relative to other studies, ranging from -4.1 to 9.9 nmol m-2 s-1 in 2014–15 and from -7.1 to 12.1 nmol m-2 s-1 in 2015–16. Stepwise multiple regression was used to investigate controls on CH4 flux and this analysis found shifting controls on CH4 flux at different periods of the growing season. During the early growing season CH4 flux was closely related to carbon dioxide fixation rates, suggesting substrate availability was the main control. The peak growing season CH4 flux was principally controlled by the CH4 oxidation in 2014, where the CH4 flux decreased and increased with soil temperature at 50 cm and soil water content at 10 cm, but a contrasting temperature-CH4 relation was found in 2015. The late growing season CH4 flux was found to be regulated by the variation in water table level and air temperature in 2014. The annual CH4 emission was near zero in both study years (0.36 ± 0.30 g CH4 m-2 yr-1 in 2014–15 and 0.13 ± 0.38 g CH4 m-2 yr-1 in 2015–16), but fell within the range of CH4 emissions reported for agriculturally managed peatlands elsewhere.

Highlights

  • Agricultural drainage is one of the most common management practices in northern peatlands

  • The abandoned peatland pasture is dominated by perennial grasses and shrubs, which are arranged in a mosaic of vegetation patches dominated by different species: patches dominated by reed canary grass (Phalaris arundinacea) and lower herbaceous and graminoid species (Carex spp., Ranunculus acris, Ranunculus repens, Hieracium sp.), and patches dominated by low shrubs, including sweet gale (Myrica gale), labrador tea (Rhododendron groenlandicum), mountain fly honeysuckle (Lonicera villosa), rhodora (Rhododendron canadense), and chokeberry (Photinia sp.)

  • The daily average air temperature ranged from ~-14.9 ̊C to 23.2 ̊C in the first study year and from ~ -11 ̊C to ~21 ̊C during the second study year, and the lowest values of both years occurred during middle-late February, while air temperature peaked in early July in 2014 and near the middle of August in 2015 (Fig 3: a1-a3)

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Summary

Introduction

Agricultural drainage is one of the most common management practices in northern peatlands.

Objectives
Methods
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