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Critical needs to close monitoring gaps in pan-tropical wetland CH4 emissions

Authors :
Qing Zhu
Kunxiaojia Yuan
Fa Li
William J Riley
Alison Hoyt
Robert Jackson
Gavin McNicol
Min Chen
Sara H Knox
Otto Briner
David Beerling
Nicola Gedney
Peter O Hopcroft
Akihito Ito
Atul K Jain
Katherine Jensen
Thomas Kleinen
Tingting Li
Xiangyu Liu
Kyle C McDonald
Joe R Melton
Paul A Miller
Jurek Müller
Changhui Peng
Benjamin Poulter
Zhangcai Qin
Shushi Peng
Hanqin Tian
Xiaoming Xu
Yuanzhi Yao
Yi Xi
Zhen Zhang
Wenxin Zhang
Qiuan Zhu
Qianlai Zhuang
Source :
Environmental Research Letters, Vol 19, Iss 11, p 114046 (2024)
Publication Year :
2024
Publisher :
IOP Publishing, 2024.

Abstract

Global wetlands are the largest and most uncertain natural source of atmospheric methane (CH _4 ). The FLUXNET-CH _4 synthesis initiative has established a global network of flux tower infrastructure, offering valuable data products and fostering a dedicated community for the measurement and analysis of methane flux data. Existing studies using the FLUXNET-CH _4 Community Product v1.0 have provided invaluable insights into the drivers of ecosystem-to-regional spatial patterns and daily-to-decadal temporal dynamics in temperate, boreal, and Arctic climate regions. However, as the wetland CH _4 monitoring network grows, there is a critical knowledge gap about where new monitoring infrastructure ought to be located to improve understanding of the global wetland CH _4 budget. Here we address this gap with a spatial representativeness analysis at existing and hypothetical observation sites, using 16 process-based wetland biogeochemistry models and machine learning. We find that, in addition to eddy covariance monitoring sites, existing chamber sites are important complements, especially over high latitudes and the tropics. Furthermore, expanding the current monitoring network for wetland CH _4 emissions should prioritize, first, tropical and second, sub-tropical semi-arid wetland regions. Considering those new hypothetical wetland sites from tropical and semi-arid climate zones could significantly improve global estimates of wetland CH _4 emissions and reduce bias by 79% (from 76 to 16 TgCH _4 y ^−1 ), compared with using solely existing monitoring networks. Our study thus demonstrates an approach for long-term strategic expansion of flux observations.

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
17489326
Volume :
19
Issue :
11
Database :
Directory of Open Access Journals
Journal :
Environmental Research Letters
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
edsdoj.f6ea824326654483a729f8f12ca0a296
Document Type :
article
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1088/1748-9326/ad8019