217-1 Advances in Soil CO2 Flux Measurement.

See more from this Division: ASA Section: Environmental Quality
See more from this Session: Symposium--Challenges in Measuring Greenhouse Gas Emissions From Soil
Tuesday, October 23, 2012: 8:00 AM
Duke Energy Convention Center, Room 264, Level 2
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Dayle McDermitt1, Liukang Xu1, Rodney Madsen2, Tanvir Demetriades-Shah1, Richard Garcia1 and Jonathan Welles3, (1)LI-COR Biosciences, Inc., Lincoln, NE
(2)LI-COR inc., Lincoln, NE
(3)PO Box 4425, LI-COR Biosciences, Inc., Lincoln, NE
This paper will discuss measurements of trace gas flux from the soil using chamber methods.  The focus will be on CO2 fluxes but many of the principles also apply to other gases.  Measuring soil gas fluxes with chambers looks simple but is sensitive to chamber design and measurement techniques.  Diffusion from the porous soil is sensitive to gas concentration in the chamber headspace and to small pressure fluctuations due to wind.  Increases in chamber CO2 during a measurement reduce the gradient between chamber and soil atmospheres suppressing the flux and often leading to non-linear plots of CO2 concentration with time.  Extent of this suppression depends upon soil porosity, which partly explains why plots of CO2 concentration with time are sometimes linear and sometimes not.  Elevated chamber CO2 can also cause elevated CO2 concentration in the soil atmosphere beneath the chamber, which can affect subsequent flux measurements.  These effects will be discussed as they relate to chamber design, data analysis methods, and soil porosity.  Evidence will be presented showing similar effects in nature.  Elevated CO2 concentrations in the atmosphere on calm nights can reduce instantaneous fluxes at night and cause changes in soil CO2 storage that affect fluxes the following day.
See more from this Division: ASA Section: Environmental Quality
See more from this Session: Symposium--Challenges in Measuring Greenhouse Gas Emissions From Soil