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Abstract
EFFECTS OF ELEVATED CO2 ON ANAEROBIC HETEROTROPHIC
METABOLISM IN A CHESAPEAKE BAY TIDAL WETLAND
Jason K. Keller, Amelia A. Wolf, Bert G. Drake,
and J. Patrick Megonigal
Smithsonian Environmental Research Center
Bio
As part of a long-term elevated CO2 experiment, we measured
monthly porewater concentrations of sulfate and methane over a 5
year period. Samples were collected using porewater wells (i.e.,
sippers) in a Scirpus olneyi-dominated (C3 sedge)
community and a Spartina patens-dominated (C4
grass) community in a brackish tidal marsh. Both plant communities
were exposed to ambient and elevated (ambient + 340 ppm) CO2
levels for 15 year prior to porewater sampling, and the treatments
continued over the course of our sampling. Our results suggest that
sulfate reduction was stimulated by elevated CO2 in the
C3-dominated community, but not in the C4-dominated
community. Overall, elevated CO2 also resulted in higher
porewater concentrations of CH4 in the C3-dominated
system; but, this effect was not as pronounced, likely due to the
inhibition of CH4 production by sulfate reduction in
this brackish system. These patterns mirror the plant response in
these communities where elevated CO2 caused a sustained
increase in total plant biomass in the C3-dominated community
and no significant increase in plant biomass in the C4-dominate
community. Our data suggest that the influence of elevated CO2
on anaerobic heterotrophic metabolism in this system is closely
linked to plant productivity.
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