EGU22-6985
https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu22-6985
EGU General Assembly 2022
© Author(s) 2022. This work is distributed under
the Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 License.

Quantification of methane fluxes from water bodies on the floodplain forest ecosystem level

Natalia Kowalska, Adam Bednarik, and Georg Jocher
Natalia Kowalska et al.
  • Global Change Research Institute Czech Academy of Science - CAS, Department of Matter and Energy Fluxes, Brno, Czechia (kowalska.n@czechglobe.cz)

Freshwaters (rivers, streams, ponds, reservoirs) are a well-recognized source of methane (CH4) characterised by large spatiotemporal variability. However, the determination of the role of water bodies for net CH4 exchange on forest ecosystem scale is very scarce. Our study aimed to determine the importance of individual emission pathways for total CH4 fluxes from streams and to verify the possible identification and quantification of CH4 fluxes from water bodies on the floodplain forest ecosystem level. In 2020, we measured CH4 fluxes by diffusion and ebullition from a lowland stream flowing through the lowland broadleaf mixed temperate forest at Lanžhot in the Czech Republic (Central Europe). For this purpose, 18 bubble traps were installed at three stream sites and periodically sampled for gas volume and its CH4 content from April to December. Diffusive CH4 fluxes from water were measured at 14 days intervals with a floating chamber connected to a portable GHG analyser. Simultaneously, CH4 exchange was determined on the forest ecosystem scale using the eddy covariance method (EC). We hypothesized initially that due to a relatively small area of water bodies in the EC footprint and a high probability of CH4 consumption by soils, CH4 emissions will be detectable by EC only in case that water bodies will create the potential CH4 emission hotspots in the studied ecosystem. We found that the investigated stream was a significant source of CH4 (mean 260 ± 107 mg CH4 m-2 day-1) with ebullition as a dominant pathway (55 – 85%) of CH4 release throughout the whole monitored time period. Furthermore, first EC results showed that the whole ecosystem is a small but constant CH4 source as we observed an average emission flux of 16 ± 18 mg CH4 m-2 day-1 over the period June to November 2021. In-depth investigations of the potential CH4 sources and sinks within the studied ecosystem should answer the question of how the relative proportion of water surfaces and related CH4 emission corresponds to whole ecosystem CH4 fluxes.

How to cite: Kowalska, N., Bednarik, A., and Jocher, G.: Quantification of methane fluxes from water bodies on the floodplain forest ecosystem level, EGU General Assembly 2022, Vienna, Austria, 23–27 May 2022, EGU22-6985, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu22-6985, 2022.