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Volatile Organic Compound fluxes in a subarctic peatland and lake
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<p>Arctic climate is warming twice as much as the global average, due to a number of climate system feedbacks, including albedo change due to retreating snow cover and sea ice, and the forest cover expansion across the open tundra. Northern ecosystems are known to emit trace gases (e.g., methane and volatile organic compounds, VOCs) to the atmosphere, from sources as diverse as soils, vegetation and lakes. These trace gas fluxes are likely to show a trend towards greater emissions with climate warming.</p><p>Here we report ecosystem-level VOC fluxes from Stordalen Mire, a subarctic peatland complex with a high fraction of open pond and lake surfaces, underlain by discontinuous permafrost and located in the Subarctic Sweden (68&#186;20' N, 19&#186;03' E).</p><p>In 2018, we deployed two online mass spectrometers (PTR-TOF-MS) to measure rapid fluctuations in VOC mixing ratios and to quantify ecosystem-level fluxes with the eddy covariance technique. One of the instruments obtained a growing-season-long dataset of biogenic emissions from palsa mire vegetation dominated by mosses (e.g., <em>Sphagnum</em> spp.), graminoids (such as <em>Eriophorum</em> spp. and <em>Carex</em> spp.), dwarf shrubs (e.g. Empetrum spp. and Betula nana) surrounding the ICOS Sweden Abisko-Stordalen long-term measurement station. The second instrument measured VOC fluxes during two contrasting periods (the peak and the end of the growing season) from a subarctic lake and its adjacent fen, permafrost-free, minerotrophic wetland with vegetation dominated by tall graminoids, mainly <em>Carex rostrata</em> and <em>Eriophorum angustifolium</em>.</p><p>At both sites, isoprene was the dominant VOC emitted by vegetation, showing clear diurnal patterns along the season and especially during the peak of the growing season in July. At the ICOS Sweden station, isoprene fluxes exceeded 2 nmol m<sup>-2</sup> s<sup>-1</sup> on several days in July, with a July monthly average midday emission of 1 nmol m<sup>-2</sup> s<sup>-1</sup>. The fen site showed average midday emissions of 2 nmol m<sup>-2</sup> s<sup>-1</sup> during the peak growing season. Other VOCs emitted by vegetation at both sites in July were, with decreasing magnitude, methanol, acetone, acetaldehyde and monoterpenes. In contrast, acetaldehyde and acetone were not emitted but mostly deposited to the fen at the end of the season. In contrast to the wetland, the lake was a sink for acetaldehyde and acetone during all measurement periods.</p><p>Thermal imaging and spectral analysis of vegetation will be used to assess relationships between VOC fluxes, vegetation surface temperatures and phenology under varying environmental conditions.</p>
Title: Volatile Organic Compound fluxes in a subarctic peatland and lake
Description:
<p>Arctic climate is warming twice as much as the global average, due to a number of climate system feedbacks, including albedo change due to retreating snow cover and sea ice, and the forest cover expansion across the open tundra.
Northern ecosystems are known to emit trace gases (e.
g.
, methane and volatile organic compounds, VOCs) to the atmosphere, from sources as diverse as soils, vegetation and lakes.
These trace gas fluxes are likely to show a trend towards greater emissions with climate warming.
</p><p>Here we report ecosystem-level VOC fluxes from Stordalen Mire, a subarctic peatland complex with a high fraction of open pond and lake surfaces, underlain by discontinuous permafrost and located in the Subarctic Sweden (68&#186;20' N, 19&#186;03' E).
</p><p>In 2018, we deployed two online mass spectrometers (PTR-TOF-MS) to measure rapid fluctuations in VOC mixing ratios and to quantify ecosystem-level fluxes with the eddy covariance technique.
One of the instruments obtained a growing-season-long dataset of biogenic emissions from palsa mire vegetation dominated by mosses (e.
g.
, <em>Sphagnum</em> spp.
), graminoids (such as <em>Eriophorum</em> spp.
and <em>Carex</em> spp.
), dwarf shrubs (e.
g.
Empetrum spp.
and Betula nana) surrounding the ICOS Sweden Abisko-Stordalen long-term measurement station.
The second instrument measured VOC fluxes during two contrasting periods (the peak and the end of the growing season) from a subarctic lake and its adjacent fen, permafrost-free, minerotrophic wetland with vegetation dominated by tall graminoids, mainly <em>Carex rostrata</em> and <em>Eriophorum angustifolium</em>.
</p><p>At both sites, isoprene was the dominant VOC emitted by vegetation, showing clear diurnal patterns along the season and especially during the peak of the growing season in July.
At the ICOS Sweden station, isoprene fluxes exceeded 2 nmol m<sup>-2</sup> s<sup>-1</sup> on several days in July, with a July monthly average midday emission of 1 nmol m<sup>-2</sup> s<sup>-1</sup>.
The fen site showed average midday emissions of 2 nmol m<sup>-2</sup> s<sup>-1</sup> during the peak growing season.
Other VOCs emitted by vegetation at both sites in July were, with decreasing magnitude, methanol, acetone, acetaldehyde and monoterpenes.
In contrast, acetaldehyde and acetone were not emitted but mostly deposited to the fen at the end of the season.
In contrast to the wetland, the lake was a sink for acetaldehyde and acetone during all measurement periods.
</p><p>Thermal imaging and spectral analysis of vegetation will be used to assess relationships between VOC fluxes, vegetation surface temperatures and phenology under varying environmental conditions.
</p>.
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