Abstract

Inappropriate drainage and agricultural development on tropical peatland may lead to an increase in methane (CH4) emission, thus expediting the rate of global warming and climate change. It was hypothesized that water table fluctuation affects CH4 emission in pineapple cultivation on tropical peat soils. The objectives of this study were to: (i) quantify CH4 emission from a tropical peat soil cultivated with pineapple and (ii) determine the effects of water table depth on CH4 emission from a peat soil under simulated water table fluctuation. Soil CH4 emissions from an open field pineapple cultivation system and field lysimeters were determined using the closed chamber method. High-density polyethylene field lysimeters were set up to simulate the natural condition of cultivated drained peat soils under different water table fluctuations. The soil CH4 flux was measured at five time intervals to obtain a 24 h CH4 emission in the dry and wet seasons during low- and high-water tables. Soil CH4 emissions from open field pineapple cultivation were significantly lower compared with field lysimeters under simulated water table fluctuation. Soil CH4 emissions throughout the dry and wet seasons irrespective of water table fluctuation were not affected by soil temperature but emissions were influenced by the balance between methanogenic and methanotrophic microorganisms controlling CH4 production and consumption, CH4 transportation through molecular diffusion via peat pore spaces, and non-microbial CH4 production in peat soils. Findings from the study suggest that water table fluctuation at the soil–water interface relatively controls the soil CH4 emission from lysimeters under simulated low- and high-water table fluctuation. The findings of this study provide an understanding of the effects of water table fluctuation on CH4 emission in a tropical peatland cultivated with pineapple.

Highlights

  • IntroductionDrained peatlands worldwide emit approximately 2 Gt of carbon dioxide (CO2 )

  • Drained peatlands worldwide emit approximately 2 Gt of carbon dioxide (CO2 )through microbial peat oxidation or peat fires representing 5% of all anthropogenic greenhouse gas (GHG) emissions [1]

  • Soil CH4 emissions from tropical peat soils cultivated with pineapples in the dry and Cultivation System in the Dry and Wet Seasons wet seasons are presented in Figures 5 and 6, respectively

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Summary

Introduction

Drained peatlands worldwide emit approximately 2 Gt of carbon dioxide (CO2 ). Through microbial peat oxidation or peat fires representing 5% of all anthropogenic greenhouse gas (GHG) emissions [1]. Carbon dioxide emitted from peatlands has been implicated in the ongoing global warming debate [2]. Unlike CO2, which is cycled and released into the atmosphere, methane (CH4 ) is emitted mostly from agricultural activities [3]. The pathways of CH4 emissions are through aerobic and anaerobic microbial respiration, root respiration, peat oxidation, nitrification, and denitrification the determinant factors which affect CH4 emissions are land-use type [6], peat type [7], photosynthetic activities [8], and water table fluctuation [9]. Carbon (C) is transformed and stored in different pools within the C cycle through, for example, burning of fossil fuels or decomposition of soil organic matter in the form of C gases into the atmosphere, whereas photosynthesis locks atmospheric C in plant tissues and deposition of organic-rich sediments on the ocean floor locks C in geologic rocks and sediments

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