Spatial variation of net methane uptake in Arctic and subarctic drylands of Canada and Greenland

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Spatial variation of net methane uptake in Arctic and subarctic drylands of Canada and Greenland. / Jørgensen, Christian Juncher; Mariager, Tue Schlaikjær; Christiansen, Jesper Riis.

In: Geoderma, Vol. 443, 116815, 2024.

Research output: Contribution to journalJournal articleResearchpeer-review

Harvard

Jørgensen, CJ, Mariager, TS & Christiansen, JR 2024, 'Spatial variation of net methane uptake in Arctic and subarctic drylands of Canada and Greenland', Geoderma, vol. 443, 116815. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.geoderma.2024.116815

APA

Jørgensen, C. J., Mariager, T. S., & Christiansen, J. R. (2024). Spatial variation of net methane uptake in Arctic and subarctic drylands of Canada and Greenland. Geoderma, 443, [116815]. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.geoderma.2024.116815

Vancouver

Jørgensen CJ, Mariager TS, Christiansen JR. Spatial variation of net methane uptake in Arctic and subarctic drylands of Canada and Greenland. Geoderma. 2024;443. 116815. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.geoderma.2024.116815

Author

Jørgensen, Christian Juncher ; Mariager, Tue Schlaikjær ; Christiansen, Jesper Riis. / Spatial variation of net methane uptake in Arctic and subarctic drylands of Canada and Greenland. In: Geoderma. 2024 ; Vol. 443.

Bibtex

@article{936b75a4b38c4b73abd4e5a0a09c10c5,
title = "Spatial variation of net methane uptake in Arctic and subarctic drylands of Canada and Greenland",
abstract = "The importance of uptake of atmospheric methane (CH4) in dry Arctic soils for the total Arctic CH4 budget is unresolved. This is partly due to lack of data on the spatial variability of net CH4 consumption and understanding of the main process drivers. We measured net CH4 consumption in Arctic and subarctic landscapes located in in Disko Bay Area and Kangerlussuaq in Western Greenland and in the St. Elias Range in the Yukon, Canada, respectively. Our aim was to characterize the in situ spatial variability of net CH4 uptake in hitherto unexplored Arctic dry upland soils to explore possible limits and environmental drivers across the Arctic geodiversity. Furthermore, we sampled soil for incubation experiments to investigate how net CH4 oxidation responded to changes in soil moisture in contrasting geomorphic settings and parent geological parent materials. We used a laser-based fast deployable chamber system for flux measurements. All studied sites were net sinks of atmospheric CH4 with an average flux −7.5 ± 5.6 μmol CH4 m-2h−1, that are in the upper range of reported net CH4 uptake fluxes in similar soils of the Arctic. The large observed spatial variability within all studied sites (coefficient of variation 50 – 120 %) highlights the need for careful research design allowing for many spatial replicates to achieve representative values. Sites with an active geomorphic environment (abrasion plateau, riverbeds, mountain tops) generally had lower than average net CH4 uptake. Our incubation studies revealed that subsurface CH4 oxidation is the main driver of net surface-atmosphere exchange and that net CH4 oxidation in these layers responded more to changes to soil moisture than in near surface layers. Our study shows surprisingly similar flux magnitudes of net CH4 uptake across widely different landscape forms and geologic parent material, but responding similarly to soil hydrology and geomorphic disturbance, indicating global controls on the net CH4 oxidation in these dry upland environments.",
keywords = "Arctic, Methane uptake, Soil, Soil moisture",
author = "J{\o}rgensen, {Christian Juncher} and Mariager, {Tue Schlaikj{\ae}r} and Christiansen, {Jesper Riis}",
note = "Publisher Copyright: {\textcopyright} 2024 The Authors",
year = "2024",
doi = "10.1016/j.geoderma.2024.116815",
language = "English",
volume = "443",
journal = "Geoderma",
issn = "0016-7061",
publisher = "Elsevier",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - Spatial variation of net methane uptake in Arctic and subarctic drylands of Canada and Greenland

AU - Jørgensen, Christian Juncher

AU - Mariager, Tue Schlaikjær

AU - Christiansen, Jesper Riis

N1 - Publisher Copyright: © 2024 The Authors

PY - 2024

Y1 - 2024

N2 - The importance of uptake of atmospheric methane (CH4) in dry Arctic soils for the total Arctic CH4 budget is unresolved. This is partly due to lack of data on the spatial variability of net CH4 consumption and understanding of the main process drivers. We measured net CH4 consumption in Arctic and subarctic landscapes located in in Disko Bay Area and Kangerlussuaq in Western Greenland and in the St. Elias Range in the Yukon, Canada, respectively. Our aim was to characterize the in situ spatial variability of net CH4 uptake in hitherto unexplored Arctic dry upland soils to explore possible limits and environmental drivers across the Arctic geodiversity. Furthermore, we sampled soil for incubation experiments to investigate how net CH4 oxidation responded to changes in soil moisture in contrasting geomorphic settings and parent geological parent materials. We used a laser-based fast deployable chamber system for flux measurements. All studied sites were net sinks of atmospheric CH4 with an average flux −7.5 ± 5.6 μmol CH4 m-2h−1, that are in the upper range of reported net CH4 uptake fluxes in similar soils of the Arctic. The large observed spatial variability within all studied sites (coefficient of variation 50 – 120 %) highlights the need for careful research design allowing for many spatial replicates to achieve representative values. Sites with an active geomorphic environment (abrasion plateau, riverbeds, mountain tops) generally had lower than average net CH4 uptake. Our incubation studies revealed that subsurface CH4 oxidation is the main driver of net surface-atmosphere exchange and that net CH4 oxidation in these layers responded more to changes to soil moisture than in near surface layers. Our study shows surprisingly similar flux magnitudes of net CH4 uptake across widely different landscape forms and geologic parent material, but responding similarly to soil hydrology and geomorphic disturbance, indicating global controls on the net CH4 oxidation in these dry upland environments.

AB - The importance of uptake of atmospheric methane (CH4) in dry Arctic soils for the total Arctic CH4 budget is unresolved. This is partly due to lack of data on the spatial variability of net CH4 consumption and understanding of the main process drivers. We measured net CH4 consumption in Arctic and subarctic landscapes located in in Disko Bay Area and Kangerlussuaq in Western Greenland and in the St. Elias Range in the Yukon, Canada, respectively. Our aim was to characterize the in situ spatial variability of net CH4 uptake in hitherto unexplored Arctic dry upland soils to explore possible limits and environmental drivers across the Arctic geodiversity. Furthermore, we sampled soil for incubation experiments to investigate how net CH4 oxidation responded to changes in soil moisture in contrasting geomorphic settings and parent geological parent materials. We used a laser-based fast deployable chamber system for flux measurements. All studied sites were net sinks of atmospheric CH4 with an average flux −7.5 ± 5.6 μmol CH4 m-2h−1, that are in the upper range of reported net CH4 uptake fluxes in similar soils of the Arctic. The large observed spatial variability within all studied sites (coefficient of variation 50 – 120 %) highlights the need for careful research design allowing for many spatial replicates to achieve representative values. Sites with an active geomorphic environment (abrasion plateau, riverbeds, mountain tops) generally had lower than average net CH4 uptake. Our incubation studies revealed that subsurface CH4 oxidation is the main driver of net surface-atmosphere exchange and that net CH4 oxidation in these layers responded more to changes to soil moisture than in near surface layers. Our study shows surprisingly similar flux magnitudes of net CH4 uptake across widely different landscape forms and geologic parent material, but responding similarly to soil hydrology and geomorphic disturbance, indicating global controls on the net CH4 oxidation in these dry upland environments.

KW - Arctic

KW - Methane uptake

KW - Soil

KW - Soil moisture

U2 - 10.1016/j.geoderma.2024.116815

DO - 10.1016/j.geoderma.2024.116815

M3 - Journal article

AN - SCOPUS:85186437824

VL - 443

JO - Geoderma

JF - Geoderma

SN - 0016-7061

M1 - 116815

ER -

ID: 389413532