Summer storms trigger soil N₂O efflux episodes in forested catchments
Metadata
Show full item recordAuthor
Enanga, E.M.
Creed, I.F.
Casson, N.J.
Beall, F.D.
Date
2016-01-14Citation
Enanga, E.M., I.F. Creed, N.J. Casson, F.D. Beall. "Summer storms trigger soil N₂O efflux episodes in forested catchments." Journal of Geophysical Research - Biogeosciences, 121(1) (January 2016): 95-108. DOI: 10.1002/2015JG003027.
Abstract
Climate change and climate-driven feedbacks on catchment hydrology and biogeochemistry have the potential to alter the aquatic versus atmospheric fate of nitrogen (N) in forests. This study investigated the hypothesis that during the forest growth season, topography redistributes water and water-soluble precursors (i.e., dissolved organic carbon and nitrate) for the formation of gaseous N species. Soil nitrous oxide (N₂O) and nitrogen (N₂) efflux and soil physical and chemical properties were measured in a temperate forest in Central Ontario, Canada from 2005 to 2010. Hotspots and hot moments of soil N₂O and N₂ efflux were observed in topographic positions that accumulate precipitation, which likely triggered the formation of redox conditions and in turn intercepted the conversion of nitrate N flowing to the stream by transforming it to N₂O and N₂. There was a strong relationship between precipitation and N₂O efflux (y = 0.44x1.22, r² = 0.618, p<0.001 in the inner wetland; y = 1.30x^{1.16} r² = 0.72, p<0.001 in the outer wetland) and significantly different N₂:N₂O ratios in different areas of the wetland (19.6 in the inner wetland and 10.1 in the outer wetland). Soil N₂O+N₂ efflux in response to precipitation events accounted for 16.1% of the annual N input. A consequence of the higher frequency of extreme precipitation events predicted under climate change scenarios is the shift from an aquatic to atmospheric fate for N, resulting in a significant forest N efflux. This in turn creates feedbacks for even warmer conditions due to increased effluxes of potent greenhouse gases.
Collections
Related items
Showing items related by title, author, creator and subject.
-
Enhancing Delivery Models and New Partnerships
Polevychok, Mechyslava; Carter, TomRecent years have witnessed a shift in the nature of models to deliver housing and support services for low income and marginalized groups in society. This shift has been prompted in part by a change in the role governments ... -
A Cross-Jurisdictional and Multi-Agency Information Model for Emergency Management
Corriveau, Guy Michel (University of WinnipegUniversity of Manitoba, 2000-07)Emergency management and the coordination of disaster-related activity are information-intensive, both in terms of the level of detail required and the diversity of information that must be generated, evaluated, and acted ... -
A model for joint public sector/private sector participation in core area housing development and core area revitalization
Levin, Earl A. (The Institute of Urban Studies, 1985)