While there is a growing number of CO2 and CH4 studies from natural ecosystems, relatively few studies come from urban wetlands.Hence, this paper caught my attention as being a potentially important, new and novel contribution.What does the term urban wetlands mean and why may greenhouse gas exchange to and from it differ from other wetlands?To my mind, I would expect urban wetlands to be recycling water from urban uses and be subject to runoff from urban landscapes, which may have elevated levels of N applications, herbicides, oil runoff from roads etc. So. these factors may affect the redox ladder and alter methane fluxes compared to those from more remote wetlands.Let's see what the authors find.C1
Kyle Delwiche, Sara Knox, Avni Malhotra, Etienne Fluet‐Chouinard, Gavin McNicol, Sarah Féron, Zutao Ouyang, Dario Papale, Carlo Trotta, Eleonora Canfora, You-Wei Cheah, Danielle Christianson, M. Carmelita R. Alberto, Pavel Alekseychik, Mika Aurela, Dennis Baldocchi, Sheel Bansal, David P. Billesbach, Gil Bohrer, Rosvel Bracho, Nina Buchmann, David I. Campbell, Gerardo Celis,
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