Understanding soil moisture and salinity effects on greenhouse gas
fluxes from coastal soils
Abstract
How will coastal forests respond to rising sea levels, disturbances such
as storms, drought, and climate change, which are combining to cause
widespread impacts on ecosystems at the terrestrial-aquatic interface?
One particular area of uncertainty is how these processes may mobilize
soil organic carbon, resulting in changes in the dissolved or gaseous
greenhouse gas (GHG) fluxes. We present results from the first year of a
manipulative experiment looking at the effects of changes in salinity
exposure and water availability on soil GHG fluxes. Large (40 cm
diameter) soil cores were transplanted along natural salinity and
elevation gradients in a Maryland, USA, coastal forest subject to rapid
sea level rise. Comparative observations were also made in a western
Washington, USA watershed with slow sea level rise but strong tidal
fluctuations. Disturbed and undisturbed control cores allow us to
distinguish transplant from salinity effects; soil respiration
measurements were made every 7-10 days. Cores transplanted to
lower-salinity sites, and to higher-elevation plots, exhibited elevated
GHG fluxes relative to disturbance controls. These preliminary results
suggest that changes in salinity exposure and water availability may
exert significant effects on coastal forest GHG fluxes and the stability
of soil carbon.