The influence of soil gas transport properties on methane oxidation in a selection of northern European soils

被引:74
|
作者
Ball, BC
Smith, KA
Klemedtsson, L
Brumme, R
Sitaula, BK
Hansen, S
Prieme, A
MacDonald, J
Horgan, GW
机构
[1] UNIV GOTTINGEN, INST FOREST NUTR & SOIL SCI, D-37077 GOTTINGEN, GERMANY
[2] NORWEGIAN CTR ECOL AGR, N-6630 TINGVOLL, NORWAY
[3] UNIV EDINBURGH, BIOMATH & STAT SCOTLAND, EDINBURGH EH9 3JZ, MIDLOTHIAN, SCOTLAND
[4] SWEDISH ENVIRONM RES INST, S-40258 GOTHENBURG, SWEDEN
[5] INST TERR ECOL, EDINBURGH RES STN, PENICUIK EH26 0QB, MIDLOTHIAN, SCOTLAND
[6] AGR UNIV NORWAY, DEPT SOIL & WATER SCI, N-1432 AS, NORWAY
[7] UNIV COPENHAGEN, DEPT POPULAT BIOL, COPENHAGEN, DENMARK
关键词
D O I
10.1029/97JD01663
中图分类号
P4 [大气科学(气象学)];
学科分类号
0706 ; 070601 ;
摘要
The oxidation of atmospheric methane in soils was measured in situ at a selection of sites in northern Europe, mainly under forest but also under moorland and agricultural arable land and grassland. Our objective was to examine how land use, soil type, and location affected methane oxidation through their impact on gas diffusivity and air permeability. Gas diffusivity at the soil surface and, in some cases, after removal of any surface organic layer was measured in situ using Freon-22 tracer in a portable probe. For about half of the sites, gas diffusivity was also measured in intact topsoil core samples in the laboratory using krypton 85. Air permeability and porosity were also measured on these cores. Although the method of measurement of CH4 oxidation varied between sites, the same techniques were used to measure soil physical properties at all sites. CH4 oxidation rates ranged from 0 to 2.5 mg m(-2) d. Diffusivity also covered a very wide range, being lowest in loam cores from wet grassland in Norway and highest in relatively dry, sandy soils in Denmark and Scotland. CH4 oxidation tended to increase with gas diffusivity measured in situ at the soil surface, though the relationship was poor at high diffusivities, presumably because CH4 oxidation was not limited by diffusion. Removal of the surface organic layer reduced in situ diffusivity at the surface and improved its relationship with CH4 oxidation rate. Sites where soils had well-developed structure and a loose and permeable organic layer at the surface tended to have the highest CH4 oxidation rates. Core measurements, particularly of air permeability, could not be obtained at some sites owing to the inability to take suitable samples. Diffusivity measured in cores generally decreased with increasing depth of sampling in the topsoil, with the 50- to 100-mm depth giving the best correlation with CH4 uptake; cores from within this layer also gave the highest CH4 oxidation during laboratory incubation. Effective comparisons between sites were hampered by the differing responses of CH4 oxidation and diffusivity to soil properties. However, multivariate cluster analysis that included the above transport variables plus others relevant to CH4 oxidation (namely, soil texture; bulk density; air-filled porosity; pH; carbon, nitrogen, and water contents; presence and depth of organic layers; and N deposition) confirmed the importance of soil water content, structure and texture in distinguishing different soil and site conditions.
引用
收藏
页码:23309 / 23317
页数:9
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [41] Spatial variability of soil gas concentration and methane oxidation capacity in landfill covers
    Roewer, Inga Ute
    Geck, Christoph
    Gebert, Julia
    Pfeiffer, Eva-Maria
    WASTE MANAGEMENT, 2011, 31 (05) : 926 - 934
  • [42] Influence of chemical properties of soils on methane emission from rice paddies
    Watanabe, A
    Kimura, M
    COMMUNICATIONS IN SOIL SCIENCE AND PLANT ANALYSIS, 1999, 30 (17-18) : 2449 - 2463
  • [43] Methane emission from stems of European beech (Fagus sylvatica) offsets as much as half of methane oxidation in soil
    Machacova, Katerina
    Warlo, Hannes
    Svobodova, Katerina
    Agyei, Thomas
    Uchytilova, Tereza
    Horacek, Petr
    Lang, Friederike
    NEW PHYTOLOGIST, 2023, 238 (02) : 584 - 597
  • [44] Relevance of soil physical properties for the microbial oxidation of methane in landfill covers
    Gebert, Julia
    Groengroeft, Alexander
    Pfeiffer, Eva-Maria
    SOIL BIOLOGY & BIOCHEMISTRY, 2011, 43 (09): : 1759 - 1767
  • [45] INFLUENCE OF PARENT MATERIALS ON THE DIFFERENTIATION OF SOILS AND OF THE SOIL MANTLE OF THE NORTHERN VOLGA UPLAND
    URUSEVSKAYA, IS
    KHOKHLOVA, OS
    SOKOLOVA, SA
    EURASIAN SOIL SCIENCE, 1993, 25 (03) : 1 - 18
  • [46] CAPACITY FOR METHANE OXIDATION IN LANDFILL COVER SOILS MEASURED IN LABORATORY-SCALE SOIL MICROCOSMS
    KIGHTLEY, D
    NEDWELL, DB
    COOPER, M
    APPLIED AND ENVIRONMENTAL MICROBIOLOGY, 1995, 61 (02) : 592 - 601
  • [47] Influence of a commercial formulation of tridemorph on methane production and oxidation in a tropical rice soil
    Bharati, K
    Mohanty, SR
    Adhya, TK
    Banerjee, A
    Rao, VR
    Sethunathan, N
    CHEMOSPHERE, 1999, 39 (06) : 933 - 943
  • [49] ABRASION OF CRUSTED SOILS - INFLUENCE OF ABRADER FLUX AND SOIL PROPERTIES
    ZOBECK, TM
    SOIL SCIENCE SOCIETY OF AMERICA JOURNAL, 1991, 55 (04) : 1091 - 1097
  • [50] Influence of Soil Properties on the Enantioselective Dissipation of the Herbicide Lactofen in Soils
    Diao, Jinling
    Lv, Chunguang
    Wang, Xinquan
    Dang, Ziheng
    Zhu, Wentao
    Zhou, Zhiqiang
    JOURNAL OF AGRICULTURAL AND FOOD CHEMISTRY, 2009, 57 (13) : 5865 - 5871