Fluxes of the greenhouse gases (CO2, CH4 and N2O) above a short-rotation poplar plantation after conversion from agricultural land (vol 169, pg 100, 2012)
Academic Article
Publication Date:
2013
abstract:
The increasing demand for renewable energy may lead to the conversion of millions of hectares into
bioenergy plantations with a possible substantial transitory carbon (C) loss. In this study we report
on the greenhouse gas fluxes (CO2, CH4, and N2O) measured using eddy covariance of a short-rotation
bioenergy poplar plantation converted from agricultural fields. During the first six months after the establishment
of the plantation (June-December 2010) there were substantial CO2, CH4, and N2O emissions
(a total of 5.36
±
0.52 Mg CO2eq ha-1 in terms of CO2 equivalents). Nitrous oxide loss mostly occurred
during a week-long peak emission after an unusually large rainfall. This week-long N2O emission represented
52% of the entire N2O loss during one and an half years of measurements. As most of the
N2O loss occurred in just this week-long period, accurately capturing these emission events are critical
to accurate estimates of the GHG balance of bioenergy. While initial establishment (June-December
2010) of the plantation resulted in a net CO2 loss into the atmosphere (2.76
±
0.16 Mg CO2eq ha-1), in
the second year (2011) there was substantial net CO2 uptake (-3.51
±
0.56 Mg CO2eq ha-1). During the
entire measurement period, CH4 was a source to the atmosphere (0.63
±
0.05 Mg CO2eq ha-1 in 2010, and
0.49
±
0.05 Mg CO2eq ha-1 in 2011), and was controlled by water table depth. Importantly, over the entire
measurement period, the sum of the CH4 and N2O losses was much higher (3.51
±
0.52 Mg CO2eq ha-1)
than the net CO2 uptake (-0.76
±
0.58 Mg CO2eq ha-1). As water availability was an important control on
the GHG emission of the plantation, expected climate change and altered rainfall pattern could increase
the negative environmental impacts of bioenergy.
Iris type:
01.01 Articolo in rivista
List of contributors:
Gioli, Beniamino
Published in: