Title of article :
Greenhouse gas (CO2, CH4, H2O) fluxes from drained and flooded agricultural peatlands in the Sacramento-San Joaquin Delta
Author/Authors :
Jaclyn A. Hatala، نويسنده , , Matteo Detto، نويسنده , , Oliver Sonnentag، نويسنده , , Steven J. Deverel، نويسنده , , Joseph Verfaillie، نويسنده , , By DENNIS D. BALDOCCHI، نويسنده ,
Issue Information :
روزنامه با شماره پیاپی سال 2012
Pages :
18
From page :
1
To page :
18
Abstract :
The Sacramento-San Joaquin Delta in California was drained and converted to agriculture more than a century ago, and since then has experienced extreme rates of soil subsidence from peat oxidation. To reverse subsidence and capture carbon there is increasing interest in converting drained agricultural land-use types to flooded conditions. Rice agriculture is proposed as a flooded land-use type with CO2 sequestration potential for this region. We conducted two years of simultaneous eddy covariance measurements at a conventional drained and grazed degraded peatland and a newly converted rice paddy to evaluate the impact of drained to flooded land-use change on CO2, CH4, and evaporation fluxes. We found that the grazed degraded peatland emitted 175–299 g-C m−2 yr−1 as CO2 and 3.3 g-C m−2 yr−1 as CH4, while the rice paddy sequestered 84–283 g-C m−2 yr−1 of CO2 from the atmosphere and released 2.5–6.6 g-C m−2 yr−1 as CH4. The rice paddy evaporated 45–95% more water than the grazed degraded peatland. Annual photosynthesis was similar between sites, but flooding at the rice paddy inhibited ecosystem respiration, making it a net CO2 sink. The rice paddy had reduced rates of soil subsidence due to oxidation compared with the drained peatland, but did not completely reverse subsidence.
Keywords :
Evaporation , Carbon flux , Rice , Eddy covariance , Evaporation , Peatland
Journal title :
Agriculture Ecosystems and Environment
Serial Year :
2012
Journal title :
Agriculture Ecosystems and Environment
Record number :
1289134
Link To Document :
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