Greenhouse gas emissions along a peat swamp forest degradation gradient in the Peruvian Amazon: soil moisture and palm roots effects

Tropical peatlands in the Peruvian Amazon exhibit high densities of Mauritia flexuosa palms, which are often cut instead of being climbed for collecting their fruits. This is an important type of forest degradation in the region that could lead to changes in the structure and composition of the forest, quality and quantity of inputs to the peat, soil properties, and greenhouse gas (GHG) fluxes. We studied peat and litterfall characteristics along a forest degradation gradient that included an intact site, a moderately degraded site, and a heavily degraded site. To understand underlying factors driving GHG emissions, we examined the response of in vitro soil microbial GHG emissions to soil moisture variation, and we tested the potential of pneumatophores to conduct GHGs in situ. The soil phosphorus and carbon content and carbon-to-nitrogen ratio as well as the litterfall nitrogen content and carbon-to-nitrogen ratio were significantly affected by forest degradation. Soils from the degraded sites consistently produced more carbon dioxide (CO2) than soils from the intact site during in vitro incubations. The response of CO2 production to changes in water-filled pore space (WFPS) followed a cubic polynomial relationship with maxima at 60–70% at the three sites. Methane (CH4) was produced in limited amounts and exclusively under water-saturated conditions. There was no significant response of nitrous oxide (N2O) emissions to WFPS variation. Lastly, the density of pneumatophore decreased drastically as the result of forest degradation and was positively correlated to in situ CH4 emissions. We conclude that recurrent M. flexuosa harvesting could result in a significant increase of in situ CO2 fluxes and a simultaneous decrease in CH4 emissions via pneumatophores. These changes might alter long-term carbon and GHG balances of the peat, and the role of these ecosystems for climate change mitigation, which stresses the need for their protection.

Saved in:
Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Lent, Jeffrey van, Hergoualc'h, Kristell, Verchot, Louis V., Oenema, Oene, Groenigen, Jan Willem van
Format: Journal Article biblioteca
Language:English
Published: Springer 2019-04
Subjects:greenhouse gases, gases de efecto invernadero, mauritia flexuosa, carbon dioxide, dioxido de carbono, nitrous oxide, óxido nitroso, methane, metano,
Online Access:https://hdl.handle.net/10568/93077
https://doi.org/10.1007/s11027-018-9796-x
Tags: Add Tag
No Tags, Be the first to tag this record!
id dig-cgspace-10568-93077
record_format koha
spelling dig-cgspace-10568-930772023-12-08T19:36:04Z Greenhouse gas emissions along a peat swamp forest degradation gradient in the Peruvian Amazon: soil moisture and palm roots effects Lent, Jeffrey van Hergoualc'h, Kristell Verchot, Louis V. Oenema, Oene Groenigen, Jan Willem van greenhouse gases gases de efecto invernadero mauritia flexuosa carbon dioxide dioxido de carbono nitrous oxide óxido nitroso methane metano Tropical peatlands in the Peruvian Amazon exhibit high densities of Mauritia flexuosa palms, which are often cut instead of being climbed for collecting their fruits. This is an important type of forest degradation in the region that could lead to changes in the structure and composition of the forest, quality and quantity of inputs to the peat, soil properties, and greenhouse gas (GHG) fluxes. We studied peat and litterfall characteristics along a forest degradation gradient that included an intact site, a moderately degraded site, and a heavily degraded site. To understand underlying factors driving GHG emissions, we examined the response of in vitro soil microbial GHG emissions to soil moisture variation, and we tested the potential of pneumatophores to conduct GHGs in situ. The soil phosphorus and carbon content and carbon-to-nitrogen ratio as well as the litterfall nitrogen content and carbon-to-nitrogen ratio were significantly affected by forest degradation. Soils from the degraded sites consistently produced more carbon dioxide (CO2) than soils from the intact site during in vitro incubations. The response of CO2 production to changes in water-filled pore space (WFPS) followed a cubic polynomial relationship with maxima at 60–70% at the three sites. Methane (CH4) was produced in limited amounts and exclusively under water-saturated conditions. There was no significant response of nitrous oxide (N2O) emissions to WFPS variation. Lastly, the density of pneumatophore decreased drastically as the result of forest degradation and was positively correlated to in situ CH4 emissions. We conclude that recurrent M. flexuosa harvesting could result in a significant increase of in situ CO2 fluxes and a simultaneous decrease in CH4 emissions via pneumatophores. These changes might alter long-term carbon and GHG balances of the peat, and the role of these ecosystems for climate change mitigation, which stresses the need for their protection. 2019-04 2018-06-06T13:28:13Z 2018-06-06T13:28:13Z Journal Article van Lent, Jeffrey, Hergoualc’h, Kristell, Verchot, Louis, Oenema, Oene, van Groenigen, Jan Willem. (2018). Greenhouse gas emissions along a peat swamp forest degradation gradient in the Peruvian Amazon: soil moisture and palm roots effects. Mitigation and Adaptation Strategies for Global Change, 1–19 p. 1381-2386 https://hdl.handle.net/10568/93077 https://doi.org/10.1007/s11027-018-9796-x en CC-BY-4.0 Open Access p. 625-643 Springer Mitigation and Adaptation Strategies for Global Change
institution CGIAR
collection DSpace
country Francia
countrycode FR
component Bibliográfico
access En linea
databasecode dig-cgspace
tag biblioteca
region Europa del Oeste
libraryname Biblioteca del CGIAR
language English
topic greenhouse gases
gases de efecto invernadero
mauritia flexuosa
carbon dioxide
dioxido de carbono
nitrous oxide
óxido nitroso
methane
metano
greenhouse gases
gases de efecto invernadero
mauritia flexuosa
carbon dioxide
dioxido de carbono
nitrous oxide
óxido nitroso
methane
metano
spellingShingle greenhouse gases
gases de efecto invernadero
mauritia flexuosa
carbon dioxide
dioxido de carbono
nitrous oxide
óxido nitroso
methane
metano
greenhouse gases
gases de efecto invernadero
mauritia flexuosa
carbon dioxide
dioxido de carbono
nitrous oxide
óxido nitroso
methane
metano
Lent, Jeffrey van
Hergoualc'h, Kristell
Verchot, Louis V.
Oenema, Oene
Groenigen, Jan Willem van
Greenhouse gas emissions along a peat swamp forest degradation gradient in the Peruvian Amazon: soil moisture and palm roots effects
description Tropical peatlands in the Peruvian Amazon exhibit high densities of Mauritia flexuosa palms, which are often cut instead of being climbed for collecting their fruits. This is an important type of forest degradation in the region that could lead to changes in the structure and composition of the forest, quality and quantity of inputs to the peat, soil properties, and greenhouse gas (GHG) fluxes. We studied peat and litterfall characteristics along a forest degradation gradient that included an intact site, a moderately degraded site, and a heavily degraded site. To understand underlying factors driving GHG emissions, we examined the response of in vitro soil microbial GHG emissions to soil moisture variation, and we tested the potential of pneumatophores to conduct GHGs in situ. The soil phosphorus and carbon content and carbon-to-nitrogen ratio as well as the litterfall nitrogen content and carbon-to-nitrogen ratio were significantly affected by forest degradation. Soils from the degraded sites consistently produced more carbon dioxide (CO2) than soils from the intact site during in vitro incubations. The response of CO2 production to changes in water-filled pore space (WFPS) followed a cubic polynomial relationship with maxima at 60–70% at the three sites. Methane (CH4) was produced in limited amounts and exclusively under water-saturated conditions. There was no significant response of nitrous oxide (N2O) emissions to WFPS variation. Lastly, the density of pneumatophore decreased drastically as the result of forest degradation and was positively correlated to in situ CH4 emissions. We conclude that recurrent M. flexuosa harvesting could result in a significant increase of in situ CO2 fluxes and a simultaneous decrease in CH4 emissions via pneumatophores. These changes might alter long-term carbon and GHG balances of the peat, and the role of these ecosystems for climate change mitigation, which stresses the need for their protection.
format Journal Article
topic_facet greenhouse gases
gases de efecto invernadero
mauritia flexuosa
carbon dioxide
dioxido de carbono
nitrous oxide
óxido nitroso
methane
metano
author Lent, Jeffrey van
Hergoualc'h, Kristell
Verchot, Louis V.
Oenema, Oene
Groenigen, Jan Willem van
author_facet Lent, Jeffrey van
Hergoualc'h, Kristell
Verchot, Louis V.
Oenema, Oene
Groenigen, Jan Willem van
author_sort Lent, Jeffrey van
title Greenhouse gas emissions along a peat swamp forest degradation gradient in the Peruvian Amazon: soil moisture and palm roots effects
title_short Greenhouse gas emissions along a peat swamp forest degradation gradient in the Peruvian Amazon: soil moisture and palm roots effects
title_full Greenhouse gas emissions along a peat swamp forest degradation gradient in the Peruvian Amazon: soil moisture and palm roots effects
title_fullStr Greenhouse gas emissions along a peat swamp forest degradation gradient in the Peruvian Amazon: soil moisture and palm roots effects
title_full_unstemmed Greenhouse gas emissions along a peat swamp forest degradation gradient in the Peruvian Amazon: soil moisture and palm roots effects
title_sort greenhouse gas emissions along a peat swamp forest degradation gradient in the peruvian amazon: soil moisture and palm roots effects
publisher Springer
publishDate 2019-04
url https://hdl.handle.net/10568/93077
https://doi.org/10.1007/s11027-018-9796-x
work_keys_str_mv AT lentjeffreyvan greenhousegasemissionsalongapeatswampforestdegradationgradientintheperuvianamazonsoilmoistureandpalmrootseffects
AT hergoualchkristell greenhousegasemissionsalongapeatswampforestdegradationgradientintheperuvianamazonsoilmoistureandpalmrootseffects
AT verchotlouisv greenhousegasemissionsalongapeatswampforestdegradationgradientintheperuvianamazonsoilmoistureandpalmrootseffects
AT oenemaoene greenhousegasemissionsalongapeatswampforestdegradationgradientintheperuvianamazonsoilmoistureandpalmrootseffects
AT groenigenjanwillemvan greenhousegasemissionsalongapeatswampforestdegradationgradientintheperuvianamazonsoilmoistureandpalmrootseffects
_version_ 1787230651791966208