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Tidsskriftpublikasjon

Recent methane surges reveal heightened emissions from tropical inundated areas

Xin Lin, Shushi Peng, Philippe Ciais, Didier Hauglustaine, Xin Lan, Gang Liu, Michel Ramonet, Yi Xi, Yi Yin, Zhen Zhang, Hartmut Bösch, Philippe Bousquet, Frédéric Chevallier, Bogang Dong, Cynthia Gerlein-Safdi, Santanu Halder, Robert J. Parker, Benjamin Poulter, Tianjiao Pu, Marine Remaud, Alexandra Runge, Marielle Saunois, Rona Louise Thompson, Yukio Yoshida, Bo Zheng

Record breaking atmospheric methane growth rates were observed in 2020
and 2021 (15.2±0.5 and 17.8±0.5 parts per billion per year), the highest since the
early 1980s. Here we use an ensemble of atmospheric inversions informed by
surface or satellite methane observations to infer emission changes during
these two years relative to 2019. Results show global methane emissions
increased by 20.3±9.9 and 24.8±3.1 teragrams per year in 2020 and 2021,
dominated by heightened emissions from tropical and boreal inundated areas,
aligning with rising groundwater storage and regional warming. Current
process-based wetland models fail to capture the tropical emission surges
revealed by atmospheric inversions, likely due to inaccurate representation of
wetland extents and associated methane emissions. Our findings underscore
the critical role of tropical inundated areas in the recent methane emission
surges and highlight the need to integrate multiple data streams and modeling
tools for better constraining tropical wetland emissions.

Publikasjonsdetaljer

Tidsskrift: Nature Communications, vol. 15, no. 1, 2024

Internasjonalt standardnummer:
Online: 2041-1723

Tidsskriftpublikasjon

År: 2024

Vitenskapelig verdi: LevelTwo

Språk: Engelsk

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