Original Research Papers

A methane ftux transect along the trans-Alaska pipeline haul road

Authors:

Abstract

Methane flux measurements were made during the summer of 1987 at 10 km intervals along a north—south transect from Prudhoe Bay (70°13’N) to the Arctic Circle (66°30’N) in Alaska. A regional comparison showed that the mean CH4 flux from arctic tundra (52 mg m-2 d-1) was significantly greater than the mean from high latitude taiga (11 mg m-2 d-1). Sites occupied on the transect were classified into 6 categories based on differences in plant communities and CH4 emission was further compared. Mean CH4 fluxes (mg m-2 d-1) for each category were: wet tundra, 90; low brush-muskeg bog, 45; moist tundra, 31; freshwater ponds, 21; spruce forest, 4.6; and alpine tundra, 0.6. Differences among means were statistically significant. During the period of observation, CH4 emission was only weakly correlated with soil temperature, water table depth, thaw depth and organic layer depth. Extending these fluxes to appropriate areas and emission periods yields independent estimates of annual CH4 emission from global tundra and taiga environments of 38 Tg and 15 Tg. This is about 46% of the wetland emission term or 10% of the global atmospheric input.

  • Year: 1990
  • Volume: 42 Issue: 3
  • Page/Article: 237-249
  • DOI: 10.3402/tellusb.v42i3.15214
  • Submitted on 9 May 1989
  • Accepted on 24 Aug 1989
  • Published on 1 Jan 1990
  • Peer Reviewed