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Carbon fluxes from a tropical peat swamp forest floor
Authors:Jyrki Jauhiainen  Hidenori Takahashi†  Juha E P Heikkinen‡  Pertti J Martikainen‡  Harri Vasander§
Institution:Department of Forest Ecology, PO Box 27, University of Helsinki, Helsinki 00014, Finland,;Graduate School of Environmental, Earth Science, Hokkaido University, Sapporo 060-0810, Japan,;Department of Environmental Sciences, PO Box 1627, University of Kuopio, 70211 Kuopio, Finland,;Department of Forest Ecology, PO Box 27, University of Helsinki 00014, Finland
Abstract:A tropical ombrotrophic peatland ecosystem is one of the largest terrestrial carbon stores. Flux rates of carbon dioxide (CO2) and methane (CH4) were studied at various peat water table depths in a mixed‐type peat swamp forest floor in Central Kalimantan, Indonesia. Temporary gas fluxes on microtopographically differing hummock and hollow peat surfaces were combined with peat water table data to produce annual cumulative flux estimates. Hummocks formed mainly from living and dead tree roots and decaying debris maintained a relatively steady CO2 emission rate regardless of the water table position in peat. In nearly vegetation‐free hollows, CO2 emission rates were progressively smaller as the water table rose towards the peat surface. Methane emissions from the peat surface remained small and were detected only in water‐saturated peat. By applying long‐term peat water table data, annual gas emissions from the peat swamp forest floor were estimated to be 3493±316 g CO2 m?2 and less than 1.36±0.57 g CH4 m?2. On the basis of the carbon emitted, CO2 is clearly a more important greenhouse gas than CH4. CO2 emissions from peat are the highest during the dry season, when the oxic peat layer is at its thickest because of water table lowering.
Keywords:carbon dioxide  CH4  climate change  CO2  greenhouse gas  methane  ombrotrophic  peat  tropics  water table
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