Nebila Lichiheb

and 7 more

Terrestrial-aquatic interfaces such as salt marshes, mangroves, and similar wetlands provide an optimum natural environment for the sequestration and long-term storage of carbon (C) from the atmosphere, commonly known as coastal blue carbon. There are over 4 million acres of salt marsh in the US and over half of these are along the east coast of the US. Due to anthropogenic activities, this area presents the greatest nitrogen (N) pollution problem in coastal ecosystems in the U.S. as part of atmospheric N deposition, runoff, and riverine export. Ammonia (NH3) is the most abundant alkaline gas in the atmosphere. Agricultural intensification is the primary anthropogenic source of NH3 leading to a doubling of reactive nitrogen (Nr) entering the biosphere. Despite this, there are limited atmospheric measurements of NH3 concentrations in coastal areas along the east coast. The objective of this study is to advance our process-level understanding of NH3 air-surface exchange over a tidal salt marsh at the Saint Jones Reserve (DE), which is part of the National Estuarine Research Reserve System (NERRs). Continuous and high temporal resolution measurements of atmospheric NH3 concentrations were measured using a cavity ring-down spectrometer, reporting 30 min concentration averages. These high temporal resolution measurements allowed the estimation of the average diurnal cycle of NH3 fluxes using a new analytical methodology. Micrometeorological measurements were also measured using the eddy covariance system operated concurrently above the tidal marsh at the research site, which is part of the AmeriFlux network (US-StJ). This pilot study represents one of the few atmospheric measurements of NH3 over a tidal salt marsh in the eastern U.S. Such measurements are important to characterize the processes that influence the exchanges of NH3 between the atmosphere and the aquatic surface and provide baseline data to form more reliable parameterizations to simulate NH3 deposition and emissions in tidal salt marshes using surface-atmosphere transfer models.

Branimir Trifunovic

and 5 more

Coastal salt marshes store large amounts of carbon but the magnitude and patterns of greenhouse gas (GHG; i.e., carbon dioxide (CO) and methane (CH)) fluxes are unclear. Information about GHG fluxes from these ecosystems comes from studies of sediments or at the ecosystem-scale (eddy covariance) but fluxes from tidal creeks are unknown. We measured GHG concentrations in water, water quality, meteorology, sediment CO efflux, ecosystem-scale GHG fluxes, and plant phenology; all at half-hour time-steps over one year. Manual creek GHG flux measurements were used to calculate gas transfer velocity () and parameterize a model of water-to-atmosphere GHG fluxes. The creek was a source of GHGs to the atmosphere where tidal patterns controlled diel variability. Dissolved oxygen and wind speed were negatively correlated with creek CH efflux. Despite lacking a seasonal pattern, creek CO efflux was correlated with drivers such as turbidity across phenological phases. Overall, night-time creek CO efflux (3.6 ± 0.63 µmol/m/s) was over two times higher than night-time marsh sediment CO efflux (1.5 ± 1.23 µmol/m/s). Creek CH efflux (17.5 ± 6.9 nmol/m/s) was four times lower than ecosystem-scale CH fluxes (68.1 ± 52.3 nmol/m/s) across the year. These results suggest that tidal creeks are potential hotspots for CO emissions and could contribute to lateral transport of CH to the coastal ocean due to supersaturation of CH (>6000 µmol/mol) in water This study provides insights for modelling GHG efflux from tidal creeks and suggests that changes in tide stage overshadow water temperature in determining magnitudes of fluxes.