Authors
Hanna J Poffenbarger, Brian A Needelman, J Patrick Megonigal
Publication date
2011/10
Journal
Wetlands
Volume
31
Issue
5
Pages
831-842
Publisher
Springer Netherlands
Description
The relationship between methane emissions and salinity is not well understood in tidal marshes, leading to uncertainty about the net effect of marsh conservation and restoration on greenhouse gas balance. We used published and unpublished field data to investigate the relationships between tidal marsh methane emissions, salinity, and porewater concentrations of methane and sulfate, then used these relationships to consider the balance between methane emissions and soil carbon sequestration. Polyhaline tidal marshes (salinity >18) had significantly lower methane emissions (mean ± sd = 1 ± 2 g m−2 yr−1) than other marshes, and can be expected to decrease radiative forcing when created or restored. There was no significant difference in methane emissions from fresh (salinity = 0–0.5) and mesohaline (5–18) marshes (42 ± 76 and 16 ± 11 g m−2 yr−1, respectively), while oligohaline (0.5 …
Total citations
201220132014201520162017201820192020202120222023202411212536504564556367827349
Scholar articles