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Reduced net methane emissions due to microbial methane oxidation in a warmer Arctic

journal contribution
posted on 2020-11-17, 00:00 authored by Bo Elberling, David Medvigy, Edward J. Dlugokencky, Gustaf Hugelius, Lau, Maggie C.Y., Licheng Liu, Lisa R. Welp, Lori Bruhwiler, Ludovica D'Imperio, Qianlai Zhuang, Tullis C. Onstott, Youmi Oh
Methane emissions from organic-rich soils in the Arctic have been extensively studied due to their potential to increase the atmospheric methane burden as permafrost thaws(1-3). However, this methane source might have been overestimated without considering high-affinity methanotrophs (HAMs; methane-oxidizing bacteria) recently identified in Arctic mineral soils(4-7). Herein we find that integrating the dynamics of HAMs and methanogens into a biogeochemistry model(8-10) that includes permafrost soil organic carbon dynamics(3) leads to the upland methane sink doubling (similar to 5.5 Tg CH4 yr(-1)) north of 50 degrees N in simulations from 2000-2016. The increase is equivalent to at least half of the difference in net methane emissions estimated between process-based models and observation-based inversions(11,12), and the revised estimates better match site-level and regional observations(5,7,13-15). The new model projects doubled wetland methane emissions between 2017-2100 due to more accessible permafrost carbon(16-18). However, most of the increase in wetland emissions is offset by a concordant increase in the upland sink, leading to only an 18% increase in net methane emission (from 29 to 35 Tg CH4 yr(-1)). The projected net methane emissions may decrease further due to different physiological responses between HAMs and methanogens in response to increasing temperature(19,20).

History

Date Created

2020-04-01

Date Modified

2020-11-17

Language

  • English

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All rights reserved.

Publisher

Nature Climate Change

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    Environmental Change Initiative

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