Winter time burst of CO2 from the High Arctic soils of Svalbard

Publikation: KonferencebidragPosterForskning

Standard

 Winter time burst of CO2 from the High Arctic soils of Svalbard. / Friborg, Thomas; Hansen, Birger; Elberling, Bo; Jensen, Louise Askær; Søndergaard, Jens Ernst; Mastepanov, Mikhail.

2008. Poster session præsenteret ved AGU 2008 Fall Meeting, San Francisco, USA.

Publikation: KonferencebidragPosterForskning

Harvard

Friborg, T, Hansen, B, Elberling, B, Jensen, LA, Søndergaard, JE & Mastepanov, M 2008, ' Winter time burst of CO2 from the High Arctic soils of Svalbard', AGU 2008 Fall Meeting, San Francisco, USA, 19/11/2008 - 13/12/2008.

APA

Friborg, T., Hansen, B., Elberling, B., Jensen, L. A., Søndergaard, J. E., & Mastepanov, M. (2008).  Winter time burst of CO2 from the High Arctic soils of Svalbard. Poster session præsenteret ved AGU 2008 Fall Meeting, San Francisco, USA.

Vancouver

Friborg T, Hansen B, Elberling B, Jensen LA, Søndergaard JE, Mastepanov M.  Winter time burst of CO2 from the High Arctic soils of Svalbard. 2008. Poster session præsenteret ved AGU 2008 Fall Meeting, San Francisco, USA.

Author

Friborg, Thomas ; Hansen, Birger ; Elberling, Bo ; Jensen, Louise Askær ; Søndergaard, Jens Ernst ; Mastepanov, Mikhail. /  Winter time burst of CO2 from the High Arctic soils of Svalbard. Poster session præsenteret ved AGU 2008 Fall Meeting, San Francisco, USA.

Bibtex

@conference{b15a3e20b6ff11ddae57000ea68e967b,
title = " Winter time burst of CO2 from the High Arctic soils of Svalbard",
abstract = "AB: Though a number of studies have reported CO2 fluxes from the Arctic, few of these include measurements from winter time and it is ften assumed that emission rates during winter time are either constant or negligible. These assumptions are often made because no data are available or consist of relatively few measurements which appear to give small and constant emission rates. Further, most studies of the processes behind winter time emission of CO2 conclude that the flux during this time of year can be linked to the respiratory release of CO2 from soil micro organisms, which is temperature dependent and given the low temperatures of the Arctic winter it is reasonable to assume that CO2 production is low. Here we present measurements from a new design of an open top chamber which has show a good potential for continuous measurements of CO2 and other gases even under extreme coldness during the winter at a high arctic location in Svalbard (78°N). Measurements were conducted in the field during the winter season of 2004-2005 and show reliable and continuous measurements of CO2 fluxes down to a level of 0.01 {\`i}mol m-2 s-1 and good correspondence with other types of soil chambers. Our results indicate that a substantial part of the annual CO2 emission from the ecosystem occur during the freeze in period, where more CO2 is emitted from the soil over a few weeks than the accumulated flux for the rest of the winter. During the coldest part of the",
author = "Thomas Friborg and Birger Hansen and Bo Elberling and Jensen, {Louise Ask{\ae}r} and S{\o}ndergaard, {Jens Ernst} and Mikhail Mastepanov",
note = "Volume: 89; null ; Conference date: 19-11-2008 Through 13-12-2008",
year = "2008",
language = "English",

}

RIS

TY - CONF

T1 -  Winter time burst of CO2 from the High Arctic soils of Svalbard

AU - Friborg, Thomas

AU - Hansen, Birger

AU - Elberling, Bo

AU - Jensen, Louise Askær

AU - Søndergaard, Jens Ernst

AU - Mastepanov, Mikhail

N1 - Volume: 89

PY - 2008

Y1 - 2008

N2 - AB: Though a number of studies have reported CO2 fluxes from the Arctic, few of these include measurements from winter time and it is ften assumed that emission rates during winter time are either constant or negligible. These assumptions are often made because no data are available or consist of relatively few measurements which appear to give small and constant emission rates. Further, most studies of the processes behind winter time emission of CO2 conclude that the flux during this time of year can be linked to the respiratory release of CO2 from soil micro organisms, which is temperature dependent and given the low temperatures of the Arctic winter it is reasonable to assume that CO2 production is low. Here we present measurements from a new design of an open top chamber which has show a good potential for continuous measurements of CO2 and other gases even under extreme coldness during the winter at a high arctic location in Svalbard (78°N). Measurements were conducted in the field during the winter season of 2004-2005 and show reliable and continuous measurements of CO2 fluxes down to a level of 0.01 ìmol m-2 s-1 and good correspondence with other types of soil chambers. Our results indicate that a substantial part of the annual CO2 emission from the ecosystem occur during the freeze in period, where more CO2 is emitted from the soil over a few weeks than the accumulated flux for the rest of the winter. During the coldest part of the

AB - AB: Though a number of studies have reported CO2 fluxes from the Arctic, few of these include measurements from winter time and it is ften assumed that emission rates during winter time are either constant or negligible. These assumptions are often made because no data are available or consist of relatively few measurements which appear to give small and constant emission rates. Further, most studies of the processes behind winter time emission of CO2 conclude that the flux during this time of year can be linked to the respiratory release of CO2 from soil micro organisms, which is temperature dependent and given the low temperatures of the Arctic winter it is reasonable to assume that CO2 production is low. Here we present measurements from a new design of an open top chamber which has show a good potential for continuous measurements of CO2 and other gases even under extreme coldness during the winter at a high arctic location in Svalbard (78°N). Measurements were conducted in the field during the winter season of 2004-2005 and show reliable and continuous measurements of CO2 fluxes down to a level of 0.01 ìmol m-2 s-1 and good correspondence with other types of soil chambers. Our results indicate that a substantial part of the annual CO2 emission from the ecosystem occur during the freeze in period, where more CO2 is emitted from the soil over a few weeks than the accumulated flux for the rest of the winter. During the coldest part of the

M3 - Poster

Y2 - 19 November 2008 through 13 December 2008

ER -

ID: 8698868