Estimating global natural wetland methane emissions using process modelling: spatio‐temporal patterns and contributions to atmospheric methane fluctuations
Type de ressource
Auteurs/contributeurs
- Zhu, Qiuan (Auteur)
- Peng, Changhui (Auteur)
- Chen, Huai (Auteur)
- Fang, Xiuqin (Auteur)
- Liu, Jinxun (Auteur)
- Jiang, Hong (Auteur)
- Yang, Yanzheng (Auteur)
- Yang, Gang (Auteur)
Titre
Estimating global natural wetland methane emissions using process modelling: spatio‐temporal patterns and contributions to atmospheric methane fluctuations
Résumé
Abstract
Aim
The fluctuations of atmospheric methane (
CH
4
) that have occurred in recent decades are not fully understood, particularly with regard to the contribution from wetlands. The application of spatially explicit parameters has been suggested as an effective method for reducing uncertainties in bottom‐up approaches to wetland
CH
4
emissions, but has not been included in recent studies. Our goal was to estimate spatio‐temporal patterns of global wetland
CH
4
emissions using a process model and then to identify the contribution of wetland emissions to atmospheric
CH
4
fluctuations.
Location
Global.
Methods
A process‐based model integrated with full descriptions of methanogenesis (
TRIPLEX‐GHG
) was used to simulate global wetland
CH
4
emissions.
Results
Global annual wetland
CH
4
emissions ranged from 209 to 245
T
g
CH
4
year
−1
between 1901 and 2012, with peaks occurring in 1991 and 2012. There is a decreasing trend between 1990 and 2010 with a rate of approximately 0.48
T
g
CH
4
year
−1
, which was largely caused by emissions from tropical wetlands showing a decreasing trend of 0.44
T
g
CH
4
year
−1
since the 1970s. Emissions from tropical, temperate and high‐latitude wetlands comprised 59, 26 and 15% of global emissions, respectively.
Main conclusion
Global wetland
CH
4
emissions, the interannual variability of which was primary controlled by tropical wetlands, partially drive the atmospheric
CH
4
burden. The stable to decreasing trend in wetland
CH
4
emissions, a result of a balance of emissions from tropical and extratropical wetlands, was a particular factor in slowing the atmospheric
CH
4
growth rate during the 1990s. The rapid decrease in tropical wetland
CH
4
emissions that began in 2000 was supposed to offset the increase in anthropogenic emissions and resulted in a relatively stable level of atmospheric
CH
4
from 2000 to 2006. Increasing wetland
CH
4
emissions, particularly after 2010, should be an important contributor to the growth in atmospheric
CH
4
seen since 2007.
Publication
Global Ecology and Biogeography
Volume
24
Numéro
8
Pages
959-972
Date
08/2015
Abrév. de revue
Global Ecology and Biogeography
Langue
en
ISSN
1466-822X, 1466-8238
Titre abrégé
Estimating global natural wetland methane emissions using process modelling
Consulté le
18/11/2024 16:50
Catalogue de bibl.
DOI.org (Crossref)
Autorisations
Référence
Zhu, Q., Peng, C., Chen, H., Fang, X., Liu, J., Jiang, H., Yang, Y., & Yang, G. (2015). Estimating global natural wetland methane emissions using process modelling: spatio‐temporal patterns and contributions to atmospheric methane fluctuations. Global Ecology and Biogeography, 24(8), 959–972. https://doi.org/10.1111/geb.12307
Auteur·e·s
Lien vers cette notice