Methane in Zackenberg Valley, NE Greenland: multidecadal growing season fluxes of a high-Arctic tundra

The carbon balance of high-latitude terrestrial ecosystems plays an essential role in the atmospheric concentration of trace gases, including carbon dioxide (CO 2 ) and methane (CH 4 ). Increasing atmospheric methane levels have contributed to ∼ 20 % of the observed global warming since the pre-indu...

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Published in:Biogeosciences
Main Authors: Scheller, Johan H., Mastepanov, Mikhail, Christiansen, Hanne H., Christensen, Torben R.
Format: Text
Language:English
Published: 2021
Subjects:
Ice
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.5194/bg-18-6093-2021
https://bg.copernicus.org/articles/18/6093/2021/
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spelling ftcopernicus:oai:publications.copernicus.org:bg93478 2023-05-15T14:55:23+02:00 Methane in Zackenberg Valley, NE Greenland: multidecadal growing season fluxes of a high-Arctic tundra Scheller, Johan H. Mastepanov, Mikhail Christiansen, Hanne H. Christensen, Torben R. 2021-11-29 application/pdf https://doi.org/10.5194/bg-18-6093-2021 https://bg.copernicus.org/articles/18/6093/2021/ eng eng doi:10.5194/bg-18-6093-2021 https://bg.copernicus.org/articles/18/6093/2021/ eISSN: 1726-4189 Text 2021 ftcopernicus https://doi.org/10.5194/bg-18-6093-2021 2021-12-06T17:22:31Z The carbon balance of high-latitude terrestrial ecosystems plays an essential role in the atmospheric concentration of trace gases, including carbon dioxide (CO 2 ) and methane (CH 4 ). Increasing atmospheric methane levels have contributed to ∼ 20 % of the observed global warming since the pre-industrial era. Rising temperatures in the Arctic are expected to promote the release of methane from Arctic ecosystems. Still, existing methane flux measurement efforts are sparse and highly scattered, and further attempts to assess the landscape fluxes over multiple years are needed. Here we combine multi-year July–August methane flux monitoring (2006–2019) from automated flux chambers in the central fens of Zackenberg Valley, northeast Greenland, with several flux measurement campaigns on the most common vegetation types in the valley to estimate the landscape fluxes over 14 years. Methane fluxes based on manual chamber measurements are available from campaigns in 1997, 1999–2000, and in shorter periods from 2007–2013 and were summarized in several published studies. The landscape fluxes are calculated for the entire valley floor and a smaller subsection of the valley floor, containing the productive fen area, Rylekærene. When integrated for the valley floor, the estimated July–August landscape fluxes were low compared to the single previous estimate, while the landscape fluxes for Rylekærene were comparable to previous estimates. The valley floor was a net methane source during July–August, with estimated mean methane fluxes ranging from 0.18 to 0.67 mg m −2 h −1 . The mean methane fluxes in the fen-rich Rylekærene were substantially higher, with fluxes ranging from 0.98 to 3.26 mg m −2 h −1 . A 2017–2018 erosion event indicates that some fen and grassland areas in the center of the valley are becoming unstable following pronounced fluvial erosion and a prolonged period of permafrost warming. Although such physical disturbance in the landscape can disrupt the current ecosystem–atmosphere flux patterns, even pronounced future erosion of ice-rich areas is unlikely to impact methane fluxes on a landscape scale significantly. Instead, projected changes in future climate in the valley play a more critical role. The results show that multi-year landscape methane fluxes are highly variable on a landscape scale and stress the need for long-term spatially distributed measurements in the Arctic. Text Arctic Global warming Greenland Ice permafrost Tundra Zackenberg Copernicus Publications: E-Journals Arctic Greenland Biogeosciences 18 23 6093 6114
institution Open Polar
collection Copernicus Publications: E-Journals
op_collection_id ftcopernicus
language English
description The carbon balance of high-latitude terrestrial ecosystems plays an essential role in the atmospheric concentration of trace gases, including carbon dioxide (CO 2 ) and methane (CH 4 ). Increasing atmospheric methane levels have contributed to ∼ 20 % of the observed global warming since the pre-industrial era. Rising temperatures in the Arctic are expected to promote the release of methane from Arctic ecosystems. Still, existing methane flux measurement efforts are sparse and highly scattered, and further attempts to assess the landscape fluxes over multiple years are needed. Here we combine multi-year July–August methane flux monitoring (2006–2019) from automated flux chambers in the central fens of Zackenberg Valley, northeast Greenland, with several flux measurement campaigns on the most common vegetation types in the valley to estimate the landscape fluxes over 14 years. Methane fluxes based on manual chamber measurements are available from campaigns in 1997, 1999–2000, and in shorter periods from 2007–2013 and were summarized in several published studies. The landscape fluxes are calculated for the entire valley floor and a smaller subsection of the valley floor, containing the productive fen area, Rylekærene. When integrated for the valley floor, the estimated July–August landscape fluxes were low compared to the single previous estimate, while the landscape fluxes for Rylekærene were comparable to previous estimates. The valley floor was a net methane source during July–August, with estimated mean methane fluxes ranging from 0.18 to 0.67 mg m −2 h −1 . The mean methane fluxes in the fen-rich Rylekærene were substantially higher, with fluxes ranging from 0.98 to 3.26 mg m −2 h −1 . A 2017–2018 erosion event indicates that some fen and grassland areas in the center of the valley are becoming unstable following pronounced fluvial erosion and a prolonged period of permafrost warming. Although such physical disturbance in the landscape can disrupt the current ecosystem–atmosphere flux patterns, even pronounced future erosion of ice-rich areas is unlikely to impact methane fluxes on a landscape scale significantly. Instead, projected changes in future climate in the valley play a more critical role. The results show that multi-year landscape methane fluxes are highly variable on a landscape scale and stress the need for long-term spatially distributed measurements in the Arctic.
format Text
author Scheller, Johan H.
Mastepanov, Mikhail
Christiansen, Hanne H.
Christensen, Torben R.
spellingShingle Scheller, Johan H.
Mastepanov, Mikhail
Christiansen, Hanne H.
Christensen, Torben R.
Methane in Zackenberg Valley, NE Greenland: multidecadal growing season fluxes of a high-Arctic tundra
author_facet Scheller, Johan H.
Mastepanov, Mikhail
Christiansen, Hanne H.
Christensen, Torben R.
author_sort Scheller, Johan H.
title Methane in Zackenberg Valley, NE Greenland: multidecadal growing season fluxes of a high-Arctic tundra
title_short Methane in Zackenberg Valley, NE Greenland: multidecadal growing season fluxes of a high-Arctic tundra
title_full Methane in Zackenberg Valley, NE Greenland: multidecadal growing season fluxes of a high-Arctic tundra
title_fullStr Methane in Zackenberg Valley, NE Greenland: multidecadal growing season fluxes of a high-Arctic tundra
title_full_unstemmed Methane in Zackenberg Valley, NE Greenland: multidecadal growing season fluxes of a high-Arctic tundra
title_sort methane in zackenberg valley, ne greenland: multidecadal growing season fluxes of a high-arctic tundra
publishDate 2021
url https://doi.org/10.5194/bg-18-6093-2021
https://bg.copernicus.org/articles/18/6093/2021/
geographic Arctic
Greenland
geographic_facet Arctic
Greenland
genre Arctic
Global warming
Greenland
Ice
permafrost
Tundra
Zackenberg
genre_facet Arctic
Global warming
Greenland
Ice
permafrost
Tundra
Zackenberg
op_source eISSN: 1726-4189
op_relation doi:10.5194/bg-18-6093-2021
https://bg.copernicus.org/articles/18/6093/2021/
op_doi https://doi.org/10.5194/bg-18-6093-2021
container_title Biogeosciences
container_volume 18
container_issue 23
container_start_page 6093
op_container_end_page 6114
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