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Published November 10, 2022 | Version v1
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Wetland plant development overrides nitrogen effects on initial methane emissions after peat rewetting

  • 1. ROR icon Radboud University Nijmegen

Description

Nitrogen often stimulates methane production and its release in aquatic ecosystem containing labile carbon. In this experimental work we could show that wetland plants/paludiculture crops efficiently take up nitrogen and showed an overall mitigating effect on methane emissions. Soil biogeochemistry and land-use history was of lesser importance for the 2 soils included in this study. A nice add on of this study is that mesocosm methane fluxes match very well with hectare scale fluxes of similar wetlands (after rewetting). This is extra motivation to conduct mesocosm studies testing methane mitigation techniques that can be applied on the field scale (around the globe).

This publication is supported by the  WET HORIZONS project.

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Christian Fritz Aquatic Botany Publication.pdf

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Additional details

Funding

WET HORIZONS – WET HORIZONS - upgrading knowledge and solutions to fast-track wetland restoration across Europe 101056848
European Commission