4.7 Article

Measurement of the 13C isotopic signature of methane emissions from northern European wetlands

Journal

GLOBAL BIOGEOCHEMICAL CYCLES
Volume 31, Issue 3, Pages 605-623

Publisher

AMER GEOPHYSICAL UNION
DOI: 10.1002/2016GB005504

Keywords

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Funding

  1. UK Natural Environment Research Council (NERC) [NE/I028874/1]
  2. NERC [NE/I014683/1, NE/F020937/1]
  3. European Community [284274]
  4. Abisko Scientific Research Station
  5. Finnish Meteorological Institute Arctic Research Centre
  6. Natural Environment Research Council [NE/P019641/1, NE/I029161/1, NE/F020937/1, NE/H019049/1, NE/I028327/1, NE/I028874/1, NE/N016211/1, NE/I010750/1, NE/I014683/1, NE/I029293/1, NE/N015835/1] Funding Source: researchfish
  7. NERC [NE/I029161/1, NE/I029293/1, NE/H019049/1, NE/I014683/1, NE/I010750/1, NE/I028874/1, NE/N016211/1, NE/P019641/1, NE/I028327/1, NE/N015835/1, NE/F020937/1] Funding Source: UKRI

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Isotopic data provide powerful constraints on regional and global methane emissions and their source profiles. However, inverse modeling of spatially resolved methane flux is currently constrained by a lack of information on the variability of source isotopic signatures. In this study, isotopic signatures of emissions in the Fennoscandian Arctic have been determined in chambers over wetland, in the air 0.3 to 3m above the wetland surface and by aircraft sampling from 100m above wetlands up to the stratosphere. Overall, the methane flux to atmosphere has a coherent delta C-13 isotopic signature of -71 +/- 1%, measured in situ on the ground in wetlands. This is in close agreement with delta C-13 isotopic signatures of local and regional methane increments measured by aircraft campaigns flying through air masses containing elevated methane mole fractions. In contrast, results from wetlands in Canadian boreal forest farther south gave isotopic signatures of -67 +/- 1%. Wetland emissions dominate the local methane source measured over the European Arctic in summer. Chamber measurements demonstrate a highly variable methane flux and isotopic signature, but the results from air sampling within wetland areas show that emissions mix rapidly immediately above the wetland surface and methane emissions reaching the wider atmosphere do indeed have strongly coherent C isotope signatures. The study suggests that for boreal wetlands (>60 degrees N) global and regional modeling can use an isotopic signature of -71 parts per thousand to apportion sources more accurately, but there is much need for further measurements over other wetlands regions to verify this.

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