Gaseous and fluvial carbon export from an Amazon forest watershed


Autoria(s): NEU, Vania; NEILL, Christopher; KRUSCHE, Alex V.
Contribuinte(s)

UNIVERSIDADE DE SÃO PAULO

Data(s)

18/10/2012

18/10/2012

2011

Resumo

The transfer of carbon (C) from Amazon forests to aquatic ecosystems as CO(2) supersaturated in groundwater that outgases to the atmosphere after it reaches small streams has been postulated to be an important component of terrestrial ecosystem C budgets. We measured C losses as soil respiration and methane (CH(4)) flux, direct CO(2) and CH(4) fluxes from the stream surface and fluvial export of dissolved inorganic C (DIC), dissolved organic C (DOC), and particulate C over an annual hydrologic cycle from a 1,319-ha forested Amazon perennial first-order headwater watershed at Tanguro Ranch in the southern Amazon state of Mato Grosso. Stream pCO(2) concentrations ranged from 6,491 to 14,976 mu atm and directly-measured stream CO(2) outgassing flux was 5,994 +/- A 677 g C m(-2) y(-1) of stream surface. Stream pCH(4) concentrations ranged from 291 to 438 mu atm and measured stream CH(4) outgassing flux was 987 +/- A 221 g C m(-2) y(-1). Despite high flux rates from the stream surface, the small area of stream itself (970 m(2), or 0.007% of watershed area) led to small directly-measured annual fluxes of CO(2) (0.44 +/- A 0.05 g C m(2) y(-1)) and CH(4) (0.07 +/- A 0.02 g C m(2) y(-1)) per unit watershed land area. Measured fluvial export of DIC (0.78 +/- A 0.04 g C m(-2) y(-1)), DOC (0.16 +/- A 0.03 g C m(-2) y(-1)) and coarse plus fine particulate C (0.001 +/- A 0.001 g C m(-2) y(-1)) per unit watershed land area were also small. However, stream discharge accounted for only 12% of the modeled annual watershed water output because deep groundwater flows dominated total runoff from the watershed. When C in this bypassing groundwater was included, total watershed export was 10.83 g C m(-2) y(-1) as CO(2) outgassing, 11.29 g C m(-2) y(-1) as fluvial DIC and 0.64 g C m(-2) y(-1) as fluvial DOC. Outgassing fluxes were somewhat lower than the 40-50 g C m(-2) y(-1) reported from other Amazon watersheds and may result in part from lower annual rainfall at Tanguro. Total stream-associated gaseous C losses were two orders of magnitude less than soil respiration (696 +/- A 147 g C m(-2) y(-1)), but total losses of C transported by water comprised up to about 20% of the +/- A 150 g C m(-2) (+/- 1.5 Mg C ha(-1)) that is exchanged annually across Amazon tropical forest canopies.

FAPESP[03/13172-2]

NSF[DEB 0640661]

Identificador

BIOGEOCHEMISTRY, v.105, n.1/Mar, p.133-147, 2011

0168-2563

http://producao.usp.br/handle/BDPI/16945

10.1007/s10533-011-9581-3

http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/s10533-011-9581-3

Idioma(s)

eng

Publicador

SPRINGER

Relação

Biogeochemistry

Direitos

restrictedAccess

Copyright SPRINGER

Palavras-Chave #Dissolved inorganic carbon #Dissolved organic carbon #Outgassing #Trace gas #Tropical forest #TROPICAL FOREST #HEADWATER CATCHMENTS #METHANE EMISSIONS #ORGANIC-CARBON #NITROUS-OXIDE #NITRIC-OXIDE #RAIN-FOREST #CO2 #DIOXIDE #STREAM #Environmental Sciences #Geosciences, Multidisciplinary
Tipo

article

original article

publishedVersion