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Inland Water Greenhouse Gas Budgets for RECCAP2: 2. Regionalization and Homogenization of Estimates.

Authors :
Lauerwald, Ronny
Allen, George H.
Deemer, Bridget R.
Liu, Shaoda
Maavara, Taylor
Raymond, Peter
Alcott, Lewis
Bastviken, David
Hastie, Adam
Holgerson, Meredith A.
Johnson, Matthew S.
Lehner, Bernhard
Lin, Peirong
Marzadri, Alessandra
Ran, Lishan
Tian, Hanqin
Yang, Xiao
Yao, Yuanzhi
Regnier, Pierre
Source :
Global Biogeochemical Cycles; May2023, Vol. 37 Issue 5, p1-16, 16p
Publication Year :
2023

Abstract

Inland waters are important sources of the greenhouse gasses (GHGs) carbon dioxide (CO2), methane (CH4) and nitrous oxide (N2O) to the atmosphere. In the framework of the second phase of the REgional Carbon Cycle Assessment and Processes (RECCAP‐2) initiative, we synthesize existing estimates of GHG emissions from streams, rivers, lakes and reservoirs, and homogenize them with regard to underlying global maps of water surface area distribution and the effects of seasonal ice cover. We then produce regionalized estimates of GHG emissions over 10 extensive land regions. According to our synthesis, inland water GHG emissions have a global warming potential of an equivalent emission of 13.5 (9.9–20.1) and 8.3 (5.7–12.7) Pg CO2‐eq. yr−1 at a 20 and 100 years horizon (GWP20 and GWP100), respectively. Contributions of CO2 dominate GWP100, with rivers being the largest emitter. For GWP20, lakes and rivers are equally important emitters, and the warming potential of CH4 is more important than that of CO2. Contributions from N2O are about two orders of magnitude lower. Normalized to the area of RECCAP‐2 regions, S‐America and SE‐Asia show the highest emission rates, dominated by riverine CO2 emissions. Key Points: We synthesized estimates of river, lake and reservoir emissions of CO2, CH4, and N2O for 10 world regions and globallyWe re‐estimate global inland water emission of 5.5 (3.5–9.1) Pg CO2 yr−1, 100 (82–135) Tg CH4 yr−1, and 322 (248–590) Gg N2O yr−1At 100 or 20 years horizon, CO2 or CH4 dominate global warming potential of emissions, respectively [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
08866236
Volume :
37
Issue :
5
Database :
Complementary Index
Journal :
Global Biogeochemical Cycles
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
163910944
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1029/2022GB007658