Back to Search Start Over

Are methane emissions from mangrove stems a cryptic carbon loss pathway? Insights from a catastrophic forest mortality

Authors :
Gloria Maria Susanne Reithmaier
James Z. Sippo
Yota Harada
Damien T. Maher
Scott G Johnston
Douglas R. Tait
Luke C. Jeffrey
Source :
The New phytologistReferences. 224(1)
Publication Year :
2019

Abstract

Growing evidence indicates that tree-stem methane (CH4 ) emissions may be an important and unaccounted-for component of local, regional and global carbon (C) budgets. Studies to date have focused on upland and freshwater swamp-forests; however, no data on tree-stem fluxes from estuarine species currently exist. Here we provide the first-ever mangrove tree-stem CH4 flux measurements from >50 trees (n = 230 measurements), in both standing dead and living forest, from a region suffering a recent large-scale climate-driven dieback event (Gulf of Carpentaria, Australia). Average CH4 emissions from standing dead mangrove tree-stems was 249.2 ± 41.0 μmol m-2 d-1 and was eight-fold higher than from living mangrove tree-stems (37.5 ± 5.8 μmol m-2 d-1 ). The average CH4 flux from tree-stem bases (c. 10 cm aboveground) was 1071.1 ± 210.4 and 96.8 ± 27.7 μmol m-2 d-1 from dead and living stands respectively. Sediment CH4 fluxes and redox potentials did not differ significantly between living and dead stands. Our results suggest both dead and living tree-stems act as CH4 conduits to the atmosphere, bypassing potential sedimentary oxidation processes. Although large uncertainties exist when upscaling data from small-scale temporal measurements, we estimated that dead mangrove tree-stem emissions may account for c. 26% of the net ecosystem CH4 flux.

Details

ISSN :
14698137
Volume :
224
Issue :
1
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
The New phytologistReferences
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....9b7bd4172898b0a27a5b9041b3ffb7cc