Abstract

AbstractReservoirs influence the global climate by exchanging greenhouse gases (GHGs) of carbon dioxide (CO2), methane (CH4), and nitrous oxide (N2O) with the atmosphere. Few studies, however, quantify emissions of all three GHGs from reservoirs, particularly in permafrost‐affected mountain regions where ecosystems are highly vulnerable to climate change. This study presents three‐year direct measurements of CO2, CH4, and N2O concentrations and fluxes upstream, within, and downstream from two reservoirs draining permafrost catchments on the Qinghai‐Tibet Plateau, including periods of reservoir drawdown. Comparing GHG fluxes across space and time exhibits a general pattern of lower fluxes at the two reservoirs relative to up‐ and downstream channels. Ebullitive fluxes contributed to 36.7% and 9.4% of total CH4 and N2O fluxes, respectively. CO2 has no response to drawdown, but CH4 and N2O display synchronous drawdown‐associated increase within the reservoir, constituting 57.5% and 32.8% of the annual reservoir emissions in just 2 months, respectively. Riverine emissions from up‐ and downstream channels accounted for an outsized fraction (55.5% for CH4, 17.3% for CO2 and 16.5% for N2O) of the system‐wide GHG budget. Compared with global reservoirs, the two reservoirs have high CO2 and N2O but low CH4 fluxes in CO2 equivalents. Upscaling shows that the two reservoirs emit the same magnitude of carbon as thermokarst lakes, and four times higher N2O than Finnish lakes on an areal basis. This article shows that alpine reservoirs draining permafrost catchments are unrecognized atmospheric sources in current reservoir GHG inventories, but also emphasizes the importance of system‐wide emissions when assessing total GHG evasion from reservoir systems.

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