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Methane emission offsets carbon dioxide uptake in a small productive lake

Dominic Vachon, Timon Langenegger, Daphne Donis, S.E. Beaubien, Daniel F. McGinnis

2020Limnology and Oceanography Letters31 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Abstract Here, we investigate the importance of net CH 4 production and emissions in the carbon (C) budget of a small productive lake by monitoring CH 4 , CO 2 , and O 2 for two consecutive years. During the study period, the lake was mostly a net emitter of both CH 4 and CO 2 , while showing positive net ecosystem production. The analyses suggest that during the whole study period, 32% ± 26% of C produced by net ecosystem production was ultimately converted to CH 4 and emitted to the atmosphere. When converted to global warming potential, CH 4 emission (in CO 2 equivalents) was about 3–10 times higher than CO 2 removal from in‐lake net ecosystem production over 100‐yr and 20‐yr time frames, respectively. Although more work in similar systems is needed to generalize these findings, our results provide evidence of the important greenhouse gas imbalance in human‐impacted aquatic systems.

Topics & Concepts

Environmental scienceEcosystemCarbon dioxideGreenhouse gasMethanePrimary productionAquatic ecosystemAtmosphere (unit)Carbon dioxide equivalentCarbon fibersProduction (economics)Environmental chemistryAtmospheric sciencesEcologyChemistryGeographyMeteorologyBiologyPhysicsMathematicsComposite numberMacroeconomicsEconomicsAlgorithmMarine and coastal ecosystemsAtmospheric and Environmental Gas DynamicsOcean Acidification Effects and Responses
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