1. Methane and nitrous oxide fluxes in the polluted Adyar River and estuary, SE India.
- Author
-
Nirmal Rajkumar A, Barnes J, Ramesh R, Purvaja R, and Upstill-Goddard RC
- Subjects
- Environmental Monitoring, India, Nitrogen chemistry, Oceans and Seas, Oxygen chemistry, Methane chemistry, Nitrous Oxide chemistry, Rivers chemistry, Water Pollutants, Chemical chemistry
- Abstract
We measured dissolved N(2)O, CH(4), O(2), NH(4)(+), NO(3)(-) and NO(2)(-) on 7 transects along the polluted Adyar River-estuary, SE India and estimated N(2)O and CH(4) emissions using a gas exchange relation and a floating chamber. High NO(2)(-) implied some nitrification of a large anthropogenic NH(4)(+) pool. In the lower catchment CH(4) was maximal (6.3+/-4.3 x 10(4)nM), exceeding the ebullition threshold, whereas strong undersaturation of N(2)O and O(2) implied intense denitrification. Emissions fluxes for the whole Adyar system approximately 2.5 x 10(8) g CH(4)yr(-1) and approximately 2.4 x 10(6)gN(2)O yr(-1) estimated with a gas exchange relation and approximately 2 x 10(9) g CH(4)yr(-1) derived with a floating chamber illustrate the importance of CH(4) ebullition. An equivalent CO(2) flux approximately 1-10 x 10(10)gy r(-1) derived using global warming potentials is equivalent to total Chennai motor vehicle CO(2) emissions in one month. Studies such as this may inform more effective waste management and future compliance with international emissions agreements. more...
- Published
- 2008
- Full Text
- View/download PDF