Back to Search Start Over

Large emissions from floodplain trees close the Amazon methane budget

Authors :
Pangala, Sunitha R.
Enrich-Prast, Alex
Basso, Luana S.
Peixoto, Roberta Bittencourt
Bastviken, David
Hornibrook, Edward R. C.
Gatti, Luciana V.
Marotta, Humberto
Calazans, Luana Silva Braucks
Sakuragui, Cassia Mônica
Bastos, Wanderley Rodrigues
Malm, Olaf
Gloor, Emanuel
Miller, John Bharat
Gauci, Vincent
Source :
Nature; December 2017, Vol. 552 Issue: 7684 p230-234, 5p
Publication Year :
2017

Abstract

Wetlands are the largest global source of atmospheric methane (CH4), a potent greenhouse gas. However, methane emission inventories from the Amazon floodplain, the largest natural geographic source of CH4in the tropics, consistently underestimate the atmospheric burden of CH4determined via remote sensing and inversion modelling, pointing to a major gap in our understanding of the contribution of these ecosystems to CH4emissions. Here we report CH4fluxes from the stems of 2,357 individual Amazonian floodplain trees from 13 locations across the central Amazon basin. We find that escape of soil gas through wetland trees is the dominant source of regional CH4emissions. Methane fluxes from Amazon tree stems were up to 200 times larger than emissions reported for temperate wet forests and tropical peat swamp forests, representing the largest non-ebullitive wetland fluxes observed. Emissions from trees had an average stable carbon isotope value (δ13C) of −66.2 ± 6.4 per mil, consistent with a soil biogenic origin. We estimate that floodplain trees emit 15.1 ± 1.8 to 21.2 ± 2.5 teragrams of CH4a year, in addition to the 20.5 ± 5.3 teragrams a year emitted regionally from other sources. Furthermore, we provide a ‘top-down’ regional estimate of CH4emissions of 42.7 ± 5.6 teragrams of CH4a year for the Amazon basin, based on regular vertical lower-troposphere CH4profiles covering the period 2010–2013. We find close agreement between our ‘top-down’ and combined ‘bottom-up’ estimates, indicating that large CH4emissions from trees adapted to permanent or seasonal inundation can account for the emission source that is required to close the Amazon CH4budget. Our findings demonstrate the importance of tree stem surfaces in mediating approximately half of all wetland CH4emissions in the Amazon floodplain, a region that represents up to one-third of the global wetland CH4source when trees are combined with other emission sources.

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
00280836 and 14764687
Volume :
552
Issue :
7684
Database :
Supplemental Index
Journal :
Nature
Publication Type :
Periodical
Accession number :
ejs44244615
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1038/nature24639