315-5 Quantifying the Impacts of Nutrient Enrichment On the Greenhouse Gas Emissions and Water Quality Improvement Functions of a Tidal Freshwater Wetland.

See more from this Division: S10 Wetland Soils
See more from this Session: General Wetland Soils: I
Tuesday, October 23, 2012: 2:15 PM
Hyatt Regency, Regency Ballroom G, Third Floor
Share |

Ellen Herbert, Laura Trice, Anya Hopple and Christopher Craft, School of Public and Environmental Affairs, Indiana University, Bloomington, IN
We measured greenhouse gas production (CH4, CO2, N2O) and nitrogen (N) removal via denitrification in anaerobic incubations of soil from plots in a tidal freshwater wetland (TFW) fertilized with either N, phosphorus (P), a combination of N and P (N&P) or left unfertilized (control) for 7 years, in order to quantify the effect of nutrient enrichment on TFW soils and associated ecosystem functions. CH4 production in N and N&P amended plots (0.15-0.19 μg CH4/g soil/hr) was more than double the production in P and control plots (0.07 μg CH4/g soil/hr) indicating N limits methanogenesis in this TFW. Furthermore, the addition of labile carbon (C) increased CH4 production 2-4x in N fertilized soils (0.39-0.84 μg CH4/g soil/hr), but not in P or control plots (0.09 μg CH4/g soil/hr). Rates of ambient CO2 and N2O production were not significantly different among treatments. Ambient denitrification rates, as measured by the acetylene block method, were highest in the N fertilized soils (0.04 μg N2O/g soil/hr). However, the addition of NO3- to denitrification incubations increased denitrification rates in all soils to 0.12-0.14 μg N2O/g soil/hr, indicating denitrifying populations responded equivalently to increased N among all treatments. Soil total P and labile P were highest in P and N&P fertilized plots, but P-sorption capacity was similar in all plots, indicating long-term P fertilization does not diminish the P retention capacity of TFW soils. Total soil N and C did not differ between treatments. These results indicate that long-term fertilization does not diminish the capacity of TFWs to remove N via denitrification or to retain P in the soil pool. However, N fertilization does increases the production of CH4, a potent greenhouse gas.
See more from this Division: S10 Wetland Soils
See more from this Session: General Wetland Soils: I