Methane flux response to nitrogen amendment in an upland pine forest soil and riparian zone

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Abstract

Methane (CH 4) is an important anthropogenic greenhouse gas, up to 15% of which is consumed by terrestrial soils. In this field study of the CH 4 cycle of a pine forest, 18 plots were established at each of two sites, located 40 m apart. The upper site was well-drained and the lower site was poorly drained, but they shared similar overstory tree composition. Nitrogen was added as NH4NO3 incrementally across the 2009 growing season in a high (67 kg NH 4 NO 3 ha -1 yr -1) and a low (5 kg NH 4 NO 3 ha -1 yr -1) concentration. The sites were monitored for soil and air temperature, soil moisture, precipitation, air pressure, and NH 4 and NO 2 +NO 3 concentrations throughout the growing season. Across all treatments for the duration of the field season, average CH 4 flux showed consumption of -0.84 kg CH 4 ha -1 yr -1, but CH4 flux differed between the upper and lower sites. Across all treatments, upper site CH 4 flux averaged -5.38 kg CH 4 ha -1 yr -1, while lower site flux averaged 3.72 kg CH 4 ha -1 yr -1, with greater variance than was observed at the upper site. High N treatments caused greater CH 4 release than the control in the lower, but not the upper, site. The main correlated variable with CH 4 flux was soil moisture; however, it accounted for <14% of the variation. Statistics were run several different ways, resulting in multiple environmental factors contributing up to 84% of the variation in CH 4 flux. Long-term drainage differences between the sites likely drove the differences in CH 4 flux. © 2012. American Geophysical Union.

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Aronson, E. L., Vann, D. R., & Helliker, B. R. (2012). Methane flux response to nitrogen amendment in an upland pine forest soil and riparian zone. Journal of Geophysical Research: Biogeosciences, 117(3). https://doi.org/10.1029/2012JG001962

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