EGU21-14400
https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu21-14400
EGU General Assembly 2021
© Author(s) 2021. This work is distributed under
the Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 License.

Nocturnal surface fluxes of N2O and CH4 determined from atmospheric measurements at the Cabauw tall tower

Xin Tong1, Fred Bosveld2, Arjan Hensen3, Bert Scheeren1, Arnoud Frumau3, and Huilin Chen1
Xin Tong et al.
  • 1Centre for Isotope Research, University of Groningen, Groningen, The Netherlands
  • 2Royal Netherlands Meteorological Institute, De Bilt, The Netherlands
  • 3Netherlands Organisation for Applied Scientific Research (TNO), Petten, The Netherlands

The agricultural emissions are the dominant sources of N2O and CH4 in the Netherlands. In this study, we have estimated nocturnal surface fluxes of both N2O and CH4 using atmospheric measurements at the Cabauw tall tower (4.927◦ E, 51.971◦ N, - 0.7 m a.s.l.). The nocturnal N2O and CH4 surface fluxes were derived using two different methods, the vertical gradient method (VGM), i.e. the sum of the storage flux and the turbulent flux, and the radon-tracer method (RTM), for the period of March 2017-December 2018 and 2016-2018, respectively. For N2O, we show that a few events occurring between May 30 and June 4 in 2018 dominated the monthly means. Using the VGM, we have estimated the annual mean nocturnal surface flux to be 0.59 ± 0.38 g/m2/yr (1 σ, the same as below) and 0.53 ± 0.19 g/m2/yr with and without events, respectively. The fluxes are high in the summer and low in the winter, with a seasonal amplitude of around 1.0 g/m2/yr and 0.5 g/m2/yr, with and without events, respectively, which is likely caused by the seasonality of agricultural activities. For CH4, the annual mean nocturnal surface flux is 12.1 ± 3.3 g/m2/yr and the amplitude is around 9.9 g/m2/yr. Using the RTM, the mean fluxes of the whole period for N2O and CH4 are estimated to be 1.18 ± 2.25 (1.08 ± 1.29, without the events) g/m2/yr and 26.9 ± 24.8 g/m2/yr, respectively; in contrast to the VGM, no apparent seasonal pattern has been found. However, there is a good linear correlation between the estimated N2O fluxes from the two methods and the monthly means show a similar pattern when the same nights are considered; the R-squared value is around 0.9 with events and 0.6 without events, and the slope varies from 1.9 to 0.8 when different estimates of radon fluxes are used. Furthermore, we found that large N2O fluxes are related to the amount of rainfall occurring days before, with the correlation coefficient of around 0.6 (p value<0.01). For CH4, there is no correlation between the estimated CH4 fluxes from the two methods. Our findings demonstrate that nocturnal N2O and CH4 fluxes in the Cabauw area are highly variable and vary over different seasons, and that both VGM and RTM are useful to quantify regional N2O and CH4 fluxes.

How to cite: Tong, X., Bosveld, F., Hensen, A., Scheeren, B., Frumau, A., and Chen, H.: Nocturnal surface fluxes of N2O and CH4 determined from atmospheric measurements at the Cabauw tall tower, EGU General Assembly 2021, online, 19–30 Apr 2021, EGU21-14400, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu21-14400, 2021.

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