4.6 Article

Effects of dry-wet cycles on nitrous oxide emissions in freshwater sediments: a synthesis

Journal

PEERJ
Volume 9, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

PEERJ INC
DOI: 10.7717/peerj.10767

Keywords

Aquatic-terrestrial interface; Intermittent; Inland waters; Lotic; Lentic; Drought; Flooding

Funding

  1. Fundacao para a Ciencia e a Tecnologia, I.P. (FCT), Portugal, under the Doctoral Programme FLUVIO - River Restoration and Management [PD/BD/114181/2016]
  2. Fundação para a Ciência e a Tecnologia [PD/BD/114181/2016] Funding Source: FCT

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This study examines the effects of drying, rewetting, flooding, and water level fluctuations on N2O emissions in aquatic sediments. It found that N2O pulses can occur following sediment drying and rewetting events, and exposed sediments during dry phases can contribute to significant N2O emissions. The physical processes and microbial activities are key factors driving N2O emissions during dry-wet cycles in lotic and lentic ecosystems.
Background. Sediments frequently exposed to dry-wet cycles are potential biogeochemical hotspots for greenhouse gas (GHG) emissions during dry, wet and transitional phases. While the effects of drying and rewetting on carbon fluxes have been studied extensively in terrestrial and aquatic systems, less is known about the effects of dry-wet cycles on N2O emissions from aquatic systems. As a notable part of lotic systems are temporary, and small lentic systems can substantially contribute to GHG emissions, dry-wet cycles in these ecosystems can play a major role on N2O emissions. Methodology. This study compiles literature focusing on the effects of drying, rewetting, flooding, and water level fluctuations on N2O emissions and related biogeochemical processes in sediments of lentic and lotic ecosystems. Results. N2O pulses were observed following sediment drying and rewetting events. Moreover, exposed sediments during dry phases can be active spots for N2O emissions. The general mechanisms behind N2O emissions during dry-wet cycles are comparable to those of soils and are mainly related to physical mechanisms and enhanced microbial processing in lotic and lentic systems. Physical processes driving N2O emissions are mainly regulated by water fluctuations in the sediment. The period of enhanced microbial activity is driven by increased nutrient availability. Higher processing rates and N2O fluxes have been mainly observed when nitrification and denitrification are coupled, under conditions largely determined by O-2 availability. Conclusions. The studies evidence the driving role of dry-wet cycles leading to temporarily high N2O emissions in sediments from a wide array of aquatic habitats. Peak fluxes appear to be of short duration, however, their relevance for global emission estimates as well as N2O emissions from dry inland waters has not been quantified. Future research should address the temporal development during drying-rewetting phases in more detail, capturing rapid flux changes at early stages, and further explore the functional impacts of the frequency and intensity of dry-wet cycles.

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