Environmental Controls on Diffusive and Ebullitive Methane Emission at a
Sub-Daily Time Scale in the Littoral Zone of a Mid-Latitude Shallow Lake
Abstract
Environmental controls on methane (CH) emission from lakes are poorly
understood at sub-daily time scales due to a lack of continuous data,
especially for ebullition. We used a novel technique to partition eddy
covariance CH flux observed in the littoral zone of a mid-latitude
shallow lake in Japan and examined the environmental controls on
diffusion and ebullitive CH flux separately at a sub-daily time scale
during different seasons. Both diffusive and ebullitive flux were
significantly higher in summer than winter. The contribution of
ebullitive flux to total flux was 56% on average. Diffusive flux
increased with increasing wind speed due to increased subsurface
turbulence. For a given wind speed, diffusive flux was higher in summer
than in winter due to the higher concentration of dissolved CH in the
surface water during summer. The transfer of accumulated dissolved CH
from the bottom layer to the surface in summer and the accumulation of
dissolved CH under surface ice in winter were important for explaining
the variability of diffusive flux. In summer, ebullition tended to occur
following triggers such as a decrease in hydrostatic pressure or an
increase in wind speed. In winter, on the other hand, the impact of
triggers was not obvious, and ebullition tended to occur in the morning
when the wind speed began to increase. The low CH production rate in
winter slowed the replenishment of bubbles in the sediment, negating the
effect of triggers on ebullition.