Publication Date:
2014-12-10
Description:
Two diel field campaigns under different weather patterns were carried out in the summer and autumn of 2013 to measure CO 2 and CH 4 fluxes and to probe the rates of gas exchange across the air–water interface in a subtropical eutrophic pond in China. Bubble emissions of CH 4 accounted for 99.7 and 91.67% of the total CH 4 emission measured at two sites in the summer; however, no bubble was observed in the autumn. The pond was supersaturated with CO 2 and CH 4 during the monitoring period, and the saturation ratios (i.e. observed concentration/equilibrium concentration) of CH 4 were much higher than that of CO 2 . Although the concentration of dissolved CO 2 in the surface water collected in the autumn was 1.24 times of that in the summer, the mean diffusive CO 2 flux across the water–air interface measured in the summer is almost twice compared with that in the autumn. The mean concentration of dissolved CH 4 in the surface water in the autumn was around half of that in the summer, but the mean diffusive CH 4 flux in the summer is 4–5 times of that in the autumn. Our data showed that the variation in gas exchange rate was dominated by differences in weather patterns and primary production. Averaged k 600 -CO 2 and k 600 -CH 4 (the gas transfer velocity normalised to a Schmidt number of 600) were 0.65 and 0.55 cm/h in the autumn, and 2.83 and 1.64 cm/h in the summer, respectively. No statistically significant correlation was found between k 600 and U 10 (wind speed at 10 m height) in the summer at low wind speeds in clear weather. Diffusive gas fluxes increased during the nights, which resulted from the nighttime cooling effect of water surface and stronger turbulent mixing in the water column. The chemical enhancements for CO 2 were estimated up to 1.94-fold in the hot and clear summer with low wind speeds, which might have been resulted from the increasing hydration reactions in water due to the high water temperature and active metabolism in planktonic algae. However, both the air and surface water temperatures decreased continually, and relatively lower temperature and overcast weather with occasionally light rain dominated the second campaign in the autumn. The concentration of dissolved oxygen in the surface water and U 10 controlled gas transfer velocities of CO 2 and CH 4 , respectively, in the cool autumn. When the surface water temperature was higher than the air temperature, higher CO 2 flux was observed because the water body was unstable and overturned quickly, inducing quick CO 2 emitted from plankton algae in surface water to the atmosphere. Keywords: gas transfer velocity, the chemical enhancement, convective cooling, wind speed, pond, subtropical, primary productivity (Published: 9 December 2014) Citation: Tellus B 2014, 66 , 23795, http://dx.doi.org/10.3402/tellusb.v66.23795
Print ISSN:
0280-6509
Electronic ISSN:
1600-0889
Topics:
Geography
,
Physics
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