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Low N2O and variable CH4 fluxes from tropical forest soils of the Congo Basin

Authors :
UCL - SST/ELI/ELIC - Earth & Climate
Barthel, M.
Bauters, M.
Baumgartner, S.
Drake, T.W.
Bey, N.M.
Bush, G.
Boeckx, P.
Dériaz, N.
Gallarotti, N.
Summerauer, L.
Van Oost, Kristof
Six, J.
UCL - SST/ELI/ELIC - Earth & Climate
Barthel, M.
Bauters, M.
Baumgartner, S.
Drake, T.W.
Bey, N.M.
Bush, G.
Boeckx, P.
Dériaz, N.
Gallarotti, N.
Summerauer, L.
Van Oost, Kristof
Six, J.
Source :
Nature Communications, Vol. 13, no.1, p. 8 (2022)
Publication Year :
2022

Abstract

Globally, tropical forests are assumed to be an important source of atmospheric nitrous oxide (N2O) and sink for methane (CH4). Yet, although the Congo Basin comprises the second largest tropical forest and is considered the most pristine large basin left on Earth, in situ N2O and CH4 flux measurements are scarce. Here, we provide multi-year data derived from on-ground soil flux (n = 1558) and riverine dissolved gas concentration (n = 332) measurements spanning montane, swamp, and lowland forests. Each forest type core monitoring site was sampled at least for one hydrological year between 2016 - 2020 at a frequency of 7-14 days. We estimate a terrestrial CH4 uptake (in kg CH4-C ha−1 yr−1) for montane (−4.28) and lowland forests (−3.52) and a massive CH4 release from swamp forests (non-inundated 2.68; inundated 341). All investigated forest types were a N2O source (except for inundated swamp forest) with 0.93, 1.56, 3.5, and −0.19 kg N2O-N ha−1 yr−1 for montane, lowland, non-inundated swamp, and inundated swamp forests, respectively.

Details

Database :
OAIster
Journal :
Nature Communications, Vol. 13, no.1, p. 8 (2022)
Notes :
English
Publication Type :
Electronic Resource
Accession number :
edsoai.on1372929012
Document Type :
Electronic Resource