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Published in: Urban Ecosystems 2/2022

28-09-2021

Greenhouse gases and green roofs: carbon dioxide and methane fluxes in relation to substrate characteristics

Authors: Md Abdul Halim, Juliana Vantellingen, Adam S. Gorgolewski, William K. Rose, Jennifer A. P. Drake, Liat Margolis, Sean C. Thomas

Published in: Urban Ecosystems | Issue 2/2022

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Abstract

Green roof systems have been increasingly implemented to enhance vegetation cover and associated ecosystem services in urban spaces, with primary goals being the reduction of peak surface runoff, enhanced water quality, and mitigation of urban heat island effects. Recently, green roofs have also received attention as a means to enhance carbon sequestration, but direct measurements of greenhouse gas fluxes from established green roof systems are largely lacking. Here we present observations of CO2 and CH4 fluxes from substrates of experimental extensive green roof units that varied in vegetation type (Sedum spp., and a native meadow species mix), substrate depth, substrate type (high vs. low organic matter content), and irrigation. We predicted that substrate CO2 effluxes would be higher in high-organic-matter substrates and that systems with high organic matter would potentially act as CH4 sources. Substrate fluxes were low compared to natural soils, with seasonal means ranging from an efflux of 0.1–0.4 µmol CO2 m-2.s-1 and uptake of ~0.00–0.04 nmol CH4 m-2.s-1, with higher fluxes late in the growing season. CO2 fluxes showed large increases in response to irrigation and were higher from the high-organic-matter substrate and with increased substrate depth. The strength of the CH4 sink increased in response to prior irrigation treatments, and CH4 emissions were detected only on low-organic-matter substrates early in the growing season. No effects of vegetation type were detected for either CO2 or CH4 flux. Our results indicate that high levels of organic matter in green roof substrates may enhance aerobic soil respiration but are not associated with CH4 emissions, which instead were only detected in low-organic-matter substrates.

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Literature
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Metadata
Title
Greenhouse gases and green roofs: carbon dioxide and methane fluxes in relation to substrate characteristics
Authors
Md Abdul Halim
Juliana Vantellingen
Adam S. Gorgolewski
William K. Rose
Jennifer A. P. Drake
Liat Margolis
Sean C. Thomas
Publication date
28-09-2021
Publisher
Springer US
Published in
Urban Ecosystems / Issue 2/2022
Print ISSN: 1083-8155
Electronic ISSN: 1573-1642
DOI
https://doi.org/10.1007/s11252-021-01166-8

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