Document Type

Journal Article

Publication Title

Science of the Total Environment

Volume

950

PubMed ID

39098408

Publisher

Elsevier

School

Centre for Marine Ecosystems Research / School of Science

Funders

Foundation TOTAL (2021 0439) / Agence de l'Eau (C002504)

Comments

Martínez-Eixarch, M., Masqué, P., Lafratta, A., Lavery, P., Hilaire, S., Jornet, L., ... & Grillas, P. (2024). Assessing methane emissions and soil carbon stocks in the Camargue coastal wetlands: Management implications for climate change regulation. Science of the Total Environment, 950. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.scitotenv.2024.175224

Abstract

Coastal wetlands are crucial in climate change regulation due to their capacity to act as either sinks or sources of carbon, resulting from the balance between greenhouse gas (GHG) emissions, mainly methane (CH4), and soil carbon sequestration. Despite the paramount role of wetlands in climate regulation few studies investigate both aspects. The Camargue is one of the largest wetlands in Europe, yet the ways in which environmental and anthropic factors drive carbon dynamics remain poorly studied. We examined GHG emissions and soil organic carbon (SOC) stocks and accumulation rates in twelve representative wetlands, including two rice fields, to gain insights into the carbon dynamics and how it is influenced by hydrology and salinity. Mean CH4 rates ranged between – 87.0 and 131.0 mg m−2 h−1and the main drivers were water conductivity and redox, water table depth and soil temperature. High emission rates were restricted to freshwater conditions during summer flooding periods whereas they were low in wetlands subjected to summer drought and water conductivity higher than 10 mS cm−1. Nitrous oxide emissions were low, ranging from – 0.5 to 0.9 mg N2O m−2 h−1. The SOC stocks in the upper meter ranged from 17 to 90 Mg OC ha−1. Our research highlights the critical role of low-saline wetlands in carbon budgeting which potentially are large sources of CH4 but also contain the largest SOC stocks in the Camargue. Natural hydroperiods, involving summer drought, can maintain them as carbon sinks, but altered hydrology can transform them into sources. Artificial freshwater supply during summer leads to substantial CH4 emissions, offsetting their SOC accumulation rates. In conclusion, we advocate for readjusting the altered hydrology in marshes and for the search of management compromises to ensure the compatibility of economic and leisure activities with the preservation of the inherent climate-regulating capacity of coastal wetlands.

DOI

10.1016/j.scitotenv.2024.175224

Creative Commons License

Creative Commons Attribution-Noncommercial 4.0 License
This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-Noncommercial 4.0 License

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