31 August 2023
By
University of Eastern Finland
Arctic soil methane consumption may
be larger than previously thought and increases in a drier climate
Automated chamber measurement set-up at Trail
Valley Creek, Western Canadian Arctic. Credit: Carolina Voigt.
Arctic wetlands are known emitters of the strong
greenhouse gas methane (CH4). Well-drained soils on the other hand
remove methane from the atmosphere. In the Arctic and boreal biomes,
well drained upland soils with a high potential for atmospheric
methane consumption cover more than 80% of the land area. Despite the
large upland coverage and their potential importance for methane
uptake, the underlying mechanisms, environmental controls and even the
magnitude of Arctic soil methane uptake are poorly understood.
A recent study led by researchers from the University of Eastern
Finland and the University of Montreal finds that Arctic soil methane
uptake may be larger than previously thought, and that methane uptake
increases under dry conditions and with availability of labile carbon
substrates. The article was published in Nature Climate Change—one of
the top-level journals in natural sciences.
The study was primarily conducted at Trail Valley Creek, a tundra site
in the Western Canadian Arctic. The authors used a unique experimental
set-up consisting of 18 automated chambers for continuous measurements
of methane fluxes. No other automated chamber system exists this far
North in the Canadian Arctic, and only few exist above the Arctic
circle globally, most of which are installed at methane-emitting
sites.
The high-resolution measurements of methane uptake (more than 40,000
flux measurements) revealed previously unknown diel and seasonal
dynamics in methane uptake: while methane uptake in early and peak
summer was largest during the afternoons, coinciding with maximum soil
temperature, methane uptake during late summer peaked during the
night.
Underlying biogeochemical mechanisms are complex, but the study shows
that the strongest methane uptake coincided with peaks of ecosystem
carbon dioxide (CO2) respiration. Complementing flux measurements at
Trail Valley Creek with measurements at other sites spread across the
Arctic in Canada and Finland showed that the availability of labile
carbon substrates and nutrients may promote methane consumption in
Arctic soils.
Conditions during field work at Trail
Valley Creek research camp, Western Canadian Arctic. Photo taken
during June, 2021. Credit: Carolina Voigt.
Upland tundra landscape during autumn
near Inuvik, Western Canadian Arctic. Credit: Carolina Voigt.
Upland tundra landscape near Inuvik,
Western Canadian Arctic. Credit: Carolina Voigt.
On a larger scale, these findings are highly
relevant for estimating the current Arctic methane budget, and for
predicting the future response of Arctic soil methane uptake to a
changing climate. According to the study, high-latitude warming
itself, occurring up to four times faster in the Arctic than the rest
of the world, will promote atmospheric methane uptake to a lesser
extent than the associated large-scale drying.
The study was carried out by an international team of researchers from
Canada and Finland, and collaborators from the United States and
Germany.
More
information: Arctic soil methane sink increases with drier
conditions and higher ecosystem respiration., Nature
Climate Change (2023). DOI:
10.1038/s41558-023-01785-3
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