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Wetlands cycle carbon by being net sinks for carbon dioxide (CO) and net sources of methane (CH). Daily and seasonal temporal patterns, dissolved oxygen (DO) availability, inundation status (flooded or dry/partially flooded), water depth, and vegetation can affect the magnitude of carbon uptake or emissions, but the extent and interactive effects of these variables on carbon gas fluxes are poorly understood. We characterized the linkages between carbon fluxes and these environmental and temporal drivers at the Old Woman Creek National Estuarine Research Reserve (OWC), OH. We measured diurnal gas flux patterns in an upstream side channel (called the cove) using chamber measurements at six sites (three vegetated and three non-vegetated). We sampled hourly from 7 AM to 7 PM and monthly from July to October 2022. DO concentrations and water levels were measured monthly. Water inundation status had the most influential effect on carbon fluxes with flooded conditions supporting higher CH fluxes (0.39 μmol CH m s; -1.23 μmol CO m s) and drier conditions supporting higher CO fluxes (0.03 μmol CH m s; 0.86 μmol CO m s). When flooded, the wetland was a net CO sink; however, it became a source for both CH and CO when water levels were low. We compared chamber-based gas fluxes from the cove in flooded (July) and dry (August) months to fluxes measured with an eddy covariance tower whose footprint covers flooded portions of the wetland. The diurnal pattern of carbon fluxes at the tower did not vary with changing water levels but remained a CO sink and a CH source even when the cove where we performed the chamber measurements dried out. These results emphasize the role of inundation status on wetland carbon cycling and highlight the importance of fluctuating hydrologic patterns, especially hydrologic drawdowns, under changing climatic conditions.
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http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.scitotenv.2024.170089 | DOI Listing |
Harmful Algae
September 2025
Centre for Resource Management and Environmental Studies, Cave Hill Campus, University of the West Indies, Bridgetown BB11000, Barbados.
Mass influxes of pelagic Sargassum spp. in the Wider Caribbean region, since their inception in 2011, continue to present authorities with unprecedented management challenges relating to clean up, disposal and development of possible uses. To address these challenges, there have been many initiatives aimed at enhancing national capacity for the management of sargassum inundations and improving adaptation to influx events, and numerous technical and academic papers published on this topic.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFSci Total Environ
August 2025
Research Center on Flood & Drought Disaster Prevention and Reduction of the Ministry of Water Resources, China Institute of Water Resources and Hydropower Research, Beijing, China.
Global warming tends to alter vegetation phenology and prolong the growing season. However, the influence of permanent and intermittent inundation on wetland vegetation responses to climate warming remains uncertain. In this study, we explored the phenological dynamics of wetland vegetation-specifically the start of the growing season (SOS) and end of the growing season (EOS)-across Northeast China from 2001 to 2020 using satellite-derived normalized difference vegetation index (NDVI) data.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFDemography
February 2025
Department of Sociology, The University of British Columbia, Vancouver, British Columbia, Canada.
Climate change and population settlement patterns are altering the severity and spatial dimensions of flooding. Despite associational evidence linking flood exposure to population health in the United States, few studies have used counterfactual strategies to address confounding or examined how sociospatial determinations of risk, such as floodplain delineation, affect well-being. Using the case of Hurricane Harvey, I leverage novel, repeated cross-sectional health survey data from Houston immediately predisaster (N = 2,540) and six to nine months postdisaster (N = 2,798), linked to local flood inundation and floodplain data.
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November 2024
Centro de Investigación Científica de Yucatán A.C., Unidad de Ciencias del Agua, Calle 8, No. 39, Mz 29, SM 64, 77524, Cancún, Quintana Roo, Mexico.
Karst represents approximately 15% of the planet's surface, hundreds of millions of people live on and rely on these aquifers for water supply and agricultural irrigation. In karstic landscapes, groundwater is exposed in sinkholes, inundated caves, and artesian wells, which are two-way communication spots. When the phreatic level is exposed, the groundwater can change substantially as a result of anthropogenic impacts, modifying the water quality and the environmental integrity by incoming excess nutrients, contaminants, pathogens, and other hazardous substances such as metals and microplastics.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFMethane (CH) is a powerful greenhouse gas with ongoing efforts aiming to quantify and map emissions from natural and managed ecosystems. Wetlands play a significant role in the global CH budget, but uncertainties in their total emissions remain large, due to a combined lack of CH data and fuzzy boundaries between mapped ecosystem categories. European floodplain meadows are anthropogenic ecosystems that originated due to traditional management for hay cropping.
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