Author/Authors :
Aerts، نويسنده , , Rien and Toet، نويسنده , , Sylvia، نويسنده ,
Abstract :
Eutrophication of peatlands may have significant effects on emissions of carbon dioxide and methane. This study analyses the effects of nitrogen (28.7 mmol NH4+N, N), phosphorus (1.78 mmol PO43−P, P) and glucose (2.79 mmol glucose, G) additions on CO2 and CH4 emission from intact soil cores from a Carex-dominated peatland in the Netherlands. The cores (taken from the upper 10 cm of the peat profile) were brought to field capacity and aerobically incubated at 20°C for 6 wk. Nutrients were added in the following combinations: 0 (unfertilized control), N, P, NP, G, NG, PG, NPG. All treatments in which glucose was present (G, NG, PG, NPG) stimulated CO2 emission during the first 2 wk of the experiment, but did not lead to increased decay of organic matter. At the end of the experiment, all treatments which included N (N, NG, NP, NPG) showed reduced CO2 emission. This was probably due to pH effects, because the pH in the N fertilized treatments was 0.4–0.8 units lower than in the unfertilized control. Cumulative CO2 emission in the N treatment was lower than in the control, but in the treatments where glucose was added it was higher. There was no effect of P addition on CO2 emission. In all treatments, cumulative CH4 emission was higher than in the control due to an initial stimulation of CH4 emission. Compared within treatments, cumulative CO2C emission was 35–164 times higher than cumulative CH4C emission. From these observations we conclude that increased amounts of NH4+N supply lead to reduction of decay of organic matter in peat soils and thereby to a reduction of gaseous carbon loss from these soils. Nutrient or glucose additions lead only to a short-term increase in methane emissions from peat soils.