4.6 Article Proceedings Paper

Methane concentration and stable isotope distribution as evidence of rhizospheric processes: Comparison of a fen and bog in the Glacial Lake Agassiz Peatland complex

Journal

ANNALS OF BOTANY
Volume 86, Issue 3, Pages 655-663

Publisher

OXFORD UNIV PRESS
DOI: 10.1006/anbo.2000.1172

Keywords

peatland; Sphagnum spp.; Carex lasiocarpa; rhizosphere; methane; stable isotopes

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This study evaluates relationships between vegetation and stable isotope distribution within a large, northern peat-accumulating wetland. Concentration and delta(13)C for both porewater and emitted methane were obtained from June-September for two systems characterized by different plant assemblages and hydrologic regimes: a Carer-dominated fen and a Sphagnum-dominated, forested bog crest. Average methane emissions were higher in the fen than at the bog crest across the entire growing season. Fen porewater methane concentrations were maintained at consistently low levels in the upper one-third of the peat column, and emitted methane was substantially C-13-depleted (by approx. 6 parts per thousand) relative to shallow porewater methane, trends which are characteristic of passive plant-mediated transport of rhizospheric methane to the atmosphere. Fen porewater delta(13)C-CH4 values in shallow pear (approx. -59 parts per thousand) suggest that microbial respiration was primarily driven by acetate fermentation. CO2 reduction became more important deeper in the peat column with delta(13)C-CH4 values ranging from approx. -65 to -69 parts per thousand between 1 and 2.8 m. In contrast to the fen, porewater methane concentrations in the bog were usually at near-maximum levels just below the water table. delta(13)C values for emitted CH4 in the bog were enriched relative to those for shallow porewater CH4 by approx. 10 parts per thousand, indicating that methane was subject to oxidation as it exited from the pear via passive diffusion. Methanogenesis in the peat at the bog crest appears to have been substrate-limited, with porewater delta(13)C-CH4 (approx. -67 parts per thousand) suggestive of CO2 reduction at all depths. (C) 2000 Annals of Botany Company.

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