Spatiotemporal variability of soil N2O and CH4 fluxes along a degradation gradient in a palm swamp peat forest in the Peruvian Amazon

CIFOR-ICRAF
CIFOR-ICRAFCIFOR-ICRAF
Kristell Hergoualc’h, N Dezzeo, LV Verchot, C Martius, J van Lent, J Del
Aguila Pasquel, M Lopez
Spatiotemporal variability of soil N2O and
CH4 fluxes along a degradation gradient in
a palm swamp peat forest in the Peruvian
Amazon
NCGG9, Amsterdam, 23rd June 2023
Peruvian peatlands
 Key contributor tropical peatlands
Gumbricht et al (201
 Amazonian peatlands mainly Mauritia
flexuosa-dominated forests (Draper et al. 2014)
 C-dense ecosystems (850 Mg C ha-1) (Draper et al. 2014)
 Recurrent degradation over 30 years: M. flexuosa
palms cut for fruit collection (Horn et al. 2018)
 73% M. flexuosa-dominated stands degraded in
pilot area (Hergoualc’h et al. 2017)
Objectives
 How do N2O and CH4 fluxes vary
spatially at the microscale and
macroscale under undegraded and
degraded conditions?
 How do the fluxes vary intra-annually
and inter-annually?
 How do environmental variables
control the spatial and temporal
variation of the fluxes?
Caballero Rodriguez
Experiment
Highly
deg.
Medium
deg.
Intact
 Iquitos, Northern Peruvian
Amazon
 Degradation gradient
I: Intact
mD: medium degradation
hD: high degradation
 3 years (including El Niño/La Niña episodes) monthly monitoring of:
→ Soil fluxes of CH4, N2O
→Environmental variables (rainfall, temperature, moisture, soil
mineral N content and dynamic)
Experiment
 Disaggregation by microtopography (hummock vs. hollow), and palm
status (live vs. cut)
 Degradation impacts on forest structure & soil microtopography
considered for site-scale assessments
0
50
100
150
200
250
Intact mDeg hDeg
M.
flexuosa
(#
ha
-1
)
Cut
Live
Live M. flexuosa Cut M. flexuosa
Hummock
size reduced
by 30%
Soil N2O fluxes
 Microscale
b, 2
a
0
2
4
6
8
10 Intact
b, 1
a
b
a
0
2
4
6
8
10 Medium Degradation
Live hummock Live hollow
Cut hummock Cut hollow
b, 2
a a
a
0
2
4
6
8
10 High Degradation
N2O hummock > N2O hollow (except for cut palms at hDeg)
N2O mDeg < N2O Intact, N2O hDeg for hummock live palm
 Macroscale
Site-scale emissions relatively steady over years
N2O mDeg (2.7) < N2O Intact (1.3), N2O hDeg (1.1) (kg N ha-1 y-1)
=> Heterogeneous soil WFPS fluctuations along the forest complex
Controls of soil N2O fluxes
 Water-filled pore space (WFPS)
 Water table level (WT)
 WT and Net
nitrification
Soil CH4 fluxes
a, 1
b, 2
0
250
500
750
1000
1250
Intact
b, 2
a, 1
b
a
Medium Degradation
Live hummock Live hollow
Cut hummock Cut hollow b, 2
a, 1
b
a
High Degradation
 Microscale
CH4 hummock < CH4 hollow at the Intact, opposite at degraded sites
CH4 Intact < CH4 degraded for hummock, opposite for hollow
 Macroscale
Site-scale emissions increased with
precipitation
No diff. in CH4 annual emissions among
sites (161-226 kg C ha-1 y-1)
Controls of soil CH4 fluxes
 Water table level (WT)
 Air temperature
 Soil net nitrification rate
Concluding remarks
 Impacts forest degradation on GHG emissions in tropical peatlands
→ Complex to monitor: Micro- to macro-scale & specific to degradation
type
→ Degradation altered micro-scale N2O and CH4 emissions, but site-
scale emissions were homogeneous among sites
 Magnitude of fluxes
→ N2O emissions (1-3 kg N ha-1 y-1) within the range of rates observed
in tropical wet forests (van Lent et al. 2015)
→CH4 emissions (200 kg C ha-1 y-1): An order of magnitude > average
for Southeast Asian peat swamp forest (30 kg C ha-1 y-1) (Hergoualc’h &
Verchot 2014)
Concluding remarks
 Climate change impacts?
Projected greatest precipitation in the study area may foster CH4
emissions which is not considered in current modeling efforts (Wang et
al 2018)
Thank you! Questions?
1 sur 12

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Spatiotemporal variability of soil N2O and CH4 fluxes along a degradation gradient in a palm swamp peat forest in the Peruvian Amazon

  • 1. Kristell Hergoualc’h, N Dezzeo, LV Verchot, C Martius, J van Lent, J Del Aguila Pasquel, M Lopez Spatiotemporal variability of soil N2O and CH4 fluxes along a degradation gradient in a palm swamp peat forest in the Peruvian Amazon NCGG9, Amsterdam, 23rd June 2023
  • 2. Peruvian peatlands  Key contributor tropical peatlands Gumbricht et al (201  Amazonian peatlands mainly Mauritia flexuosa-dominated forests (Draper et al. 2014)  C-dense ecosystems (850 Mg C ha-1) (Draper et al. 2014)  Recurrent degradation over 30 years: M. flexuosa palms cut for fruit collection (Horn et al. 2018)  73% M. flexuosa-dominated stands degraded in pilot area (Hergoualc’h et al. 2017)
  • 3. Objectives  How do N2O and CH4 fluxes vary spatially at the microscale and macroscale under undegraded and degraded conditions?  How do the fluxes vary intra-annually and inter-annually?  How do environmental variables control the spatial and temporal variation of the fluxes? Caballero Rodriguez
  • 4. Experiment Highly deg. Medium deg. Intact  Iquitos, Northern Peruvian Amazon  Degradation gradient I: Intact mD: medium degradation hD: high degradation  3 years (including El Niño/La Niña episodes) monthly monitoring of: → Soil fluxes of CH4, N2O →Environmental variables (rainfall, temperature, moisture, soil mineral N content and dynamic)
  • 5. Experiment  Disaggregation by microtopography (hummock vs. hollow), and palm status (live vs. cut)  Degradation impacts on forest structure & soil microtopography considered for site-scale assessments 0 50 100 150 200 250 Intact mDeg hDeg M. flexuosa (# ha -1 ) Cut Live Live M. flexuosa Cut M. flexuosa Hummock size reduced by 30%
  • 6. Soil N2O fluxes  Microscale b, 2 a 0 2 4 6 8 10 Intact b, 1 a b a 0 2 4 6 8 10 Medium Degradation Live hummock Live hollow Cut hummock Cut hollow b, 2 a a a 0 2 4 6 8 10 High Degradation N2O hummock > N2O hollow (except for cut palms at hDeg) N2O mDeg < N2O Intact, N2O hDeg for hummock live palm  Macroscale Site-scale emissions relatively steady over years N2O mDeg (2.7) < N2O Intact (1.3), N2O hDeg (1.1) (kg N ha-1 y-1) => Heterogeneous soil WFPS fluctuations along the forest complex
  • 7. Controls of soil N2O fluxes  Water-filled pore space (WFPS)  Water table level (WT)  WT and Net nitrification
  • 8. Soil CH4 fluxes a, 1 b, 2 0 250 500 750 1000 1250 Intact b, 2 a, 1 b a Medium Degradation Live hummock Live hollow Cut hummock Cut hollow b, 2 a, 1 b a High Degradation  Microscale CH4 hummock < CH4 hollow at the Intact, opposite at degraded sites CH4 Intact < CH4 degraded for hummock, opposite for hollow  Macroscale Site-scale emissions increased with precipitation No diff. in CH4 annual emissions among sites (161-226 kg C ha-1 y-1)
  • 9. Controls of soil CH4 fluxes  Water table level (WT)  Air temperature  Soil net nitrification rate
  • 10. Concluding remarks  Impacts forest degradation on GHG emissions in tropical peatlands → Complex to monitor: Micro- to macro-scale & specific to degradation type → Degradation altered micro-scale N2O and CH4 emissions, but site- scale emissions were homogeneous among sites  Magnitude of fluxes → N2O emissions (1-3 kg N ha-1 y-1) within the range of rates observed in tropical wet forests (van Lent et al. 2015) →CH4 emissions (200 kg C ha-1 y-1): An order of magnitude > average for Southeast Asian peat swamp forest (30 kg C ha-1 y-1) (Hergoualc’h & Verchot 2014)
  • 11. Concluding remarks  Climate change impacts? Projected greatest precipitation in the study area may foster CH4 emissions which is not considered in current modeling efforts (Wang et al 2018)