Aerobic Methane Emission from Plants in the Inner Mongolia Steppe
Citations Over TimeTop 10% of 2007 papers
Abstract
Traditionally, methane (CH4) emission from terrestrial plants is thought to originate from belowground microbial metabolism under anaerobic conditions, with subsequent transport to the atmosphere through stems. However, a recent study reported aerobic CH4 emission from plants by an unrecognized process, a result that has since been questioned. We investigated CH4 emissions under aerobic conditions from aboveground tissues of 44 species indigenous to the temperate Inner Mongolia steppe. Ten herbaceous hydrophytes (wetland-adapted plants) were examined, two of which--Glyceria spiculosa and Scirpus yagara--emitted CH4 from stems but not from detached leaves. Of 34 xerophytes (arid-adapted plants) examined, 7 out of 9 shrub species emitted CH4 from detached leaves but not stems, whereas none of 25 herbaceous xerophytes emitted CH4. The herbaceous hydrophyte, S. yagara, emitted highly 13C-depleted CH4, suggesting a microbial origin. Achillea frigida exhibited the highest CH4 emission rates among the shrubs and continuously emitted relatively 13C-enriched CH4 from detached leaves, indicating that CH4 was derived directly from plant tissues under aerobic conditions. Because woody species are relatively rare in the Inner Mongolia steppe, aerobic, plant-derived CH4 emission is probably negligible in this region. Our results may imply a larger role for aerobic CH4 production in upland ecosystems dominated by woody species or in ecosystems where woody encroachment is occurring as a result of global change.
Related Papers
- → Decomposition of roots in a Chihuahuan Desert ecosystem(1988)58 cited
- Experimental Research on Grass-shrub Disposition Model of Vegetation Restoration of Highway Side Slope(2008)
- Rooting strategies of savanna shrubs in the Kalahari basin: Implications for the coexistence of woody and herbaceous plants and shrub encroachment(2020)
- Creating photographic loading sequences in the field for the photoload sampling technique(2020)
- → ROOTING STRATEGIES OF SAVANNA SHRUBS IN THE KALAHARI BASIN: IMPLICATIONS FOR THE COEXISTENCE OF WOODY AND HERBACEOUS PLANTS AND SHRUB ENCROACHMENT IN THE AFRICAN SAVANNAS(2020)