We found a match
Your institution may have access to this item. Find your institution then sign in to continue.
- Title
Nitrous Oxide Emissions from Soils in Louisiana's Atchafalaya River Basin.
- Authors
Scaroni, Amy; Ye, Siyuan; Lindau, C.; Nyman, J.
- Abstract
The Atchafalaya River Basin functions as a net sink for nitrogen delivered by the Mississippi and Red Rivers. Continued influx of river-borne sediment drives rapid habitat change on the floodplain, and lakes are transitioning to seasonally flooded baldcypress swamps and bottomland hardwood forests. As flooding regimes change, leading to more intermittent wet and dry cycles, soil conditions become more conducive to incomplete denitrification resulting in increased NO emissions. The objective of this laboratory study was to determine if sediments in the Basin are potential sources of NO emissions, and if emission rates differ among habitats types. Results indicate that potential NO emission rates are low, and differ by habitat type. Lake sediments had the highest potential denitrification rates (53.68 g N-N had), while baldcypress sediments had the highest potential NO emissions (2.31 g NO-N had). Unflooded bottomland hardwood sediments had very low denitrification potential and were not a source of NO emissions, but emissions of both N and NO increased after bottomland hardwood sediments were flooded. These results suggest that overall NO emissions are low, but management strategies aiming to improve water quality and reduce greenhouse gas emissions should consider each habitat separately when modeling nitrogen removal within large floodplains.
- Subjects
WATERSHEDS; NITROGEN; HABITATS; FLOODPLAINS; BALDCYPRESS; DENITRIFICATION
- Publication
Wetlands, 2014, Vol 34, Issue 3, p545
- ISSN
0277-5212
- Publication type
Article
- DOI
10.1007/s13157-014-0521-6