Abstract

Wetlands represent about one-third of the global soil organic carbon storage and are the largest natural source of atmospheric methane, a powerful greenhouse gas. Understanding the factors that influence the carbon dynamics in wetlands, and their influence on methane emission, is therefore important. Dissolved organic carbon (DOC) is a major form of carbon export from wetlands and plays an essential role in the aquatic carbon cycling process. However, constraints on spatial and temporal dynamics of DOC in vertical peat layers and their relationship to wetland methane emissions are still rare. Here we investigated spatiotemporal changes in porewater DOC concentration and optical properties (SUVA254, E2/E3, E4/E6) in surface (0–10 cm) and deep (20–30 cm, 50–60 cm, 100–110 cm) peat layers in a subtropical wetland complex, central China, with the aim to explore DOC dynamics and their relationship to methane emissions from wetlands. DOC dynamics and environmental controls were investigated in the context of high-resolution environmental monitoring, including air temperature, rainfall, water table depth, water chemistry, and methane emissions. DOC of surface peat layers generally had higher concentrations, higher aromaticity, lower humification, and greater temporal variations compared to deeper peat layers. During summer floods and high water table conditions, DOC concentrations in the surface peat increased significantly, whilst DOC exports from rivers and lakes also increased synchronously. In contrast, DOC concentrations and spectral properties of deep peat layers remained constant across the sampling months and water table fluctuations. Methane emissions were positively correlated with air temperature and DOC concentration in the porewater of surface peat layers, and negatively correlated with water table depth. Our results suggest that DOC concentration in the porewater of surface peat layers may also have affected the flux of methane emission from wetlands.

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