Short-term spatial and temporal variability in greenhouse gas fluxes in riparian zones.

P Vidon, S Marchese, M Welsh, S McMillan
Author Information
  1. P Vidon: SUNY-ESF, 1 Forestry Drive, Syracuse, NY, 13210, USA, pgvidon@esf.edu.

Abstract

Recent research indicates that riparian zones have the potential to contribute significant amounts of greenhouse gases (GHG: N2O, CO2, CH4) to the atmosphere. Yet, the short-term spatial and temporal variability in GHG emission in these systems is poorly understood. Using two transects of three static chambers at two North Carolina agricultural riparian zones (one restored, one unrestored), we show that estimates of the average GHG flux at the site scale can vary by one order of magnitude depending on whether the mean or the median is used as a measure of central tendency. Because the median tends to mute the effect of outlier points (hot spots and hot moments), we propose that both must be reported or that other more advanced spatial averaging techniques (e.g., kriging, area-weighted average) should be used to estimate GHG fluxes at the site scale. Results also indicate that short-term temporal variability in GHG fluxes (a few days) under seemingly constant temperature and hydrological conditions can be as large as spatial variability at the site scale, suggesting that the scientific community should rethink sampling protocols for GHG at the soil-atmosphere interface to include repeated measures over short periods of time at select chambers to estimate GHG emissions in the field. Although recent advances in technology provide tools to address these challenges, their cost is often too high for widespread implementation. Until technology improves, sampling design strategies will need to be carefully considered to balance cost, time, and spatial and temporal representativeness of measurements.

References

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MeSH Term

Agriculture
Carbon Dioxide
Environmental Monitoring
Gases
Greenhouse Effect
Methane
Nitrous Oxide
North Carolina
Rivers
Soil

Chemicals

Gases
Soil
Carbon Dioxide
Nitrous Oxide
Methane

Word Cloud

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