Detecting Hot Spots of Methane Flux Using Footprint-Weighted Flux Maps.
Camilo Rey-SanchezAriane Arias-OrtizKuno KasakHousen ChuDaphne SzutuJoseph G VerfaillieDennis D BaldocchiPublished in: Journal of geophysical research. Biogeosciences (2022)
In this study, we propose a new technique for mapping the spatial heterogeneity in gas exchange around flux towers using flux footprint modeling and focusing on detecting hot spots of methane (CH 4 ) flux. In the first part of the study, we used a CH 4 release experiment to evaluate three common flux footprint models: the Hsieh model (Hsieh et al., 2000), the Kljun model (Kljun et al., 2015), and the K & M model (Kormann and Meixner, 2001), finding that the K & M model was the most accurate under these conditions. In the second part of the study, we introduce the Footprint-Weighted Flux Map, a new technique to map spatial heterogeneity in fluxes. Using artificial CH 4 release experiments, natural tracer approaches and flux chambers we mapped the spatial flux heterogeneity, and detected and validated a hot spot of CH 4 flux in a oligohaline restored marsh. Through chamber measurements during the months of April and May, we found that fluxes at the hot spot were on average as high as 6589 ± 7889 nmol m -2 s -1 whereas background flux from the open water were on average 15.2 ± 7.5 nmol m -2 s -1 . This study provides a novel tool to evaluate the spatial heterogeneity of fluxes around eddy-covariance towers and creates important insights for the interpretation of hot spots of CH 4 flux, paving the way for future studies aiming to understand subsurface biogeochemical processes and the microbiological conditions that lead to the occurrence of hot spots and hot moments of CH 4 flux.