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The contribution of boreal wetlands to the Northern hemisphere carbonyl sulfide sink
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  • Anna de Vries,
  • Georg Wohlfahrt,
  • Kukka-Maaria Kohonen,
  • Camille Abadie,
  • Marine Remaud,
  • Jürgen Kesselmeier,
  • Asta Tuulia Laasonen,
  • Mary Whelan,
  • Ivan Mammarella,
  • Timo Vesala
Anna de Vries
Universitat Innsbruck

Corresponding Author:[email protected]

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Georg Wohlfahrt
University of Innsbruck
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Kukka-Maaria Kohonen
ETH Zurich
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Camille Abadie
Laboratoire des Sciences du Climat et de l'Environnement
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Marine Remaud
Vrije Universiteit Amsterdam
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Jürgen Kesselmeier
Max-Planck-Institut fur Chemie
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Asta Tuulia Laasonen
Helsingin yliopisto
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Mary Whelan
Rutgers University
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Ivan Mammarella
University of Helsinki
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Timo Vesala
University of Helsinki, Institute for Atmospheric and Earth System Research
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Abstract

not-yet-known not-yet-known not-yet-known unknown Carbonyl sulfide (COS), an atmospheric gas used as a tracer in carbon cycle studies, has an inferred missing sink in high Northern latitudes. Boreal COS budgets typically account for the contribution by forests and ignore any uptake that wetland ecosystems, widespread in Northern latitudes, may contribute. The first direct measurements of the ecosystem-atmosphere COS exchange of a boreal wetland, presented here, demonstrate their likely importance in that Northern latitude COS budgets. The investigated wetland (Siikaneva, Finland) took up on average 11 pmol m−2s−1 COS, which was ~72 % of the nearby boreal forest COS uptake. During nighttime, the COS uptake rates were similar at both sites. Upscaling our measurements to the boreal region using the ORCHIDEE model revealed in a Northern wetland sink of ~13 Gg S/y, changing the budget model output from a small source to a COS sink impacting Northern latitudes carbon uptake estimates based on COS.
08 Oct 2024Submitted to ESS Open Archive
08 Oct 2024Published in ESS Open Archive