Publications des scientifiques de l'IRD

Abril Gwenaël, Parize M., Perez M. A. P., Filizola N. (2013). Wood decomposition in Amazonian hydropower reservoirs : an additional source of greenhouse gases. Journal of South American Earth Sciences, 44 (SI), p. 104-107. ISSN 0895-9811.

Titre du document
Wood decomposition in Amazonian hydropower reservoirs : an additional source of greenhouse gases
Année de publication
2013
Type de document
Article référencé dans le Web of Science WOS:000319546200012
Auteurs
Abril Gwenaël, Parize M., Perez M. A. P., Filizola N.
Source
Journal of South American Earth Sciences, 2013, 44 (SI), p. 104-107 ISSN 0895-9811
Amazonian hydroelectric reservoirs produce abundant carbon dioxide and methane from large quantities of flooded biomass that decompose anaerobically underwater. Emissions are extreme the first years after impounding and progressively decrease with time. To date, only water-to-air fluxes have been considered in these estimates. Here, we investigate in two Amazonian reservoirs (Balbina and Petit Saut) the fate of above water standing dead trees, by combining a qualitative analysis of wood state and density through time and a quantitative analysis of the biomass initially flooded. Dead wood was much more decomposed in the Balbina reservoir 23 years after flooding than in the Petit Saut reservoir 10 years after flooding. Termites apparently played a major role in wood decomposition, occurring mainly above water, and resulting in a complete conversion of this carbon biomass into CO2 and CH4 at a timescale much shorter than reservoir operation. The analysis of pre-impounding wood biomass reveals that above-water decomposition in Amazonian reservoirs is a large, previously unrecognized source of carbon emissions to the atmosphere, representing 26-45% of the total reservoir flux integrated over 100 years. Accounting for both below-and above-water fluxes, we could estimate that each km(2) of Amazonian forest converted to reservoir would emit over 140 Gg CO2-eq in 100 years. Hydropower plants in the Amazon should thus generate 0.25-0.4 MW h per km(2) flooded area to produce lower greenhouse gas emissions than gas power plants. They also have the disadvantage to emit most of their greenhouse gases the earliest years of operation.
Plan de classement
Sciences du milieu [021] ; Hydrologie [062]
Description Géographique
BRESIL ; GUYANE FRANCAISE
Localisation
Fonds IRD [F B010060400]
Identifiant IRD
fdi:010060400
Contact