Surface nitrous oxide (N2O) concentrations and fluxes from different rivers draining contrasting landscapes: Spatio-temporal variability, controls, and implications based on IPCC emission factor
2020
Zhang, Wangshou | Li, Hengpeng | Xiao, Qitao | Jiang, Sanyuan | Li, Xinyan
Increasing indirect nitrous oxide (N₂O) emission from river networks as a result of enhanced human activities on landscapes has become a global issue, as N₂O has been widely recognized as an important ozone-depleting greenhouse gas. However, indirect N₂O emissions from different rivers, particularly for those that drain completely different landscapes, are poorly understood. Here, we investigated the spatial-temporal variability of N₂O emissions among the different rivers in the Chaohu Lake Basin of Eastern China. Our results showed that river reaches in urban watersheds are the hotspots of N₂O production, with a mean N₂O concentration of ∼410 nmol L⁻¹, which is 9–18 times greater than those mainly draining forested (23 nmol L⁻¹), agricultural (42 nmol L⁻¹) and mixed (45 nmol L⁻¹) landscapes. Riverine dissolved N₂O was generally supersaturated with respect to the atmosphere. Such N₂O saturation can best be explained by nitrogen availability, except for those in the forested watersheds, where dissolved oxygen is thought to be the primary predictor. The estimated N₂O fluxes in urban rivers reached ∼471 μmol m⁻² d⁻¹, a value of ∼22, 13, and 11 times that in forested, agricultural and mixed watersheds, respectively. Averaged riverine N₂O emission factors (EF₅ᵣ) of the forested, agricultural, urban and mixed watersheds were 0.066%, 0.12%, 0.95% and 0.16%, respectively, showing different deviations from the default EF₅ᵣ that released by IPCC in 2019. This points to a need for more field measurements with wider spatial coverage and finer frequency to further refine the EF₅ᵣ and to better reveal the mechanisms behind indirect N₂O emissions as influenced by watershed landscapes.
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