4.5 Article

Spatial variations of methane emission in a large shallow eutrophic lake in subtropical climate

Journal

JOURNAL OF GEOPHYSICAL RESEARCH-BIOGEOSCIENCES
Volume 122, Issue 7, Pages 1597-1614

Publisher

AMER GEOPHYSICAL UNION
DOI: 10.1002/2017JG003805

Keywords

Lake Taihu; CH4 flux; spatial pattern; temporal variation

Funding

  1. National Natural Science Foundation of China [41575147, 41475141, 41505005]
  2. Priority Academic Program Development of Jiangsu Higher Education Institutions (PARD)
  3. Ministry of Education of China (grant PCSIRT)
  4. Natural Science Foundation of Jiangsu Province, China [BK20150900]
  5. Innovation Project for Graduate Students of Jiangsu Province [KYZZ15_0246]

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Subtropical lakes are important source of atmospheric methane (CH4). This study aims to investigate spatial variations of CH4 flux in Lake Taihu, a large (area 2400km(2)) and shallow (mean depth 1.9m) eutrophic lake in Eastern China. The lake exhibited high spatial variations in pollution level, macrophyte vegetation abundance, and algal growth. We measured the diffusion CH4 flux via the transfer coefficient method across the whole lake. In addition, data obtained with the flux gradient and the eddy covariance methods were used in conjunction with the data on the diffusion flux to estimate the contribution by ebullition. Results from 3 years' measurements indicated high spatial variabilities in the diffusion CH4 flux. The spatial pattern of the diffusion CH4 emission was correlated with water clarity, dissolved oxygen concentration, and the spatial distributions of algal and submerged vegetation. In comparison to the transfer coefficient method, the eddy covariance and the flux gradient method observed a lake CH4 flux that was 3.390.58 (mean1 standard deviation) and 1.950.36 times higher in an open-water eutrophic zone and in a habitat of submerged macrophytes, respectively. The result implied an average of 71% and 49% ebullition contribution to the total CH4 flux in the two zones. The annual mean diffusion CH4 flux of the whole lake was 0.540.30gm(-2)yr(-1). Our CH4 emission data suggest that the average CH4 emission reported previously for lakes in Eastern China was overestimated.

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