| Literature DB >> 27892535 |
Qiuan Zhu1,2, Changhui Peng1,2, Jinxun Liu3, Hong Jiang4, Xiuqin Fang5, Huai Chen6, Zhenguo Niu7, Peng Gong8, Guanghui Lin8, Meng Wang1, Han Wang1, Yanzheng Yang1, Jie Chang9, Ying Ge9, Wenhua Xiang10, Xiangwen Deng10, Jin-Sheng He11.
Abstract
Both anthropogenic activities and climate change can affect the biogeochemical processes of natural wetland methanogenesis. Quantifying possible impacts of changing climate and wetland area on wetland methane (CH4) emissions in China is important for improving our knowledge on CH4 budgets locally and globally. However, their respective and combined effects are uncertain. We incorporated changes in wetland area derived from remote sensing into a dynamic CH4 model to quantify the human and climate change induced contributions to natural wetland CH4 emissions in China over the past three decades. Here we found that human-induced wetland loss contributed 34.3% to the CH4 emissions reduction (0.92 TgCH4), and climate change contributed 20.4% to the CH4 emissions increase (0.31 TgCH4), suggesting that decreasing CH4 emissions due to human-induced wetland reductions has offset the increasing climate-driven CH4 emissions. With climate change only, temperature was a dominant controlling factor for wetland CH4 emissions in the northeast (high latitude) and Qinghai-Tibet Plateau (high altitude) regions, whereas precipitation had a considerable influence in relative arid north China. The inevitable uncertainties caused by the asynchronous for different regions or periods due to inter-annual or seasonal variations among remote sensing images should be considered in the wetland CH4 emissions estimation.Entities:
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Year: 2016 PMID: 27892535 PMCID: PMC5125101 DOI: 10.1038/srep38020
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Sci Rep ISSN: 2045-2322 Impact factor: 4.379
Figure 1National and regional wetland area dynamics (Bar and symbol line), CH4 emissions from wetlands (Bar), contribution percentage of each region to national wetland CH4 emissions (Pie), and spatial patterns of wetland CH4 emission rates with specific wetland distribution information (maps) of China in four periods (1978, 1990, 2000 and 2008).
Regions: Northeast China (NE), Qinghai-Tibet Plateau (QTP), northern China (NCN), and southern China (SCN). The maps were generated with ArcGIS 10.2, http://www.esri.com/.
Figure 2Effects of wetland area dynamics (a) and climate change (b) on CH4 emissions throughout China and in each specific region in four periods (1978, 1990, 2000, and 2008). Numbers above the bars represent the percentage change of wetland CH4 emissions between baseline and climate change only simulations (a), and between baseline and wetland area dynamics only simulations (b). Regions: Northeast China (NE), Qinghai-Tibet Plateau (QTP), northern China (NCN), and southern China (SCN). Simulation scenarios: Baseline, Climate Change Only (CCO), Wetland Area Dynamic Only (WADO). (see Supplementary Table S1).
Figure 3(a) Mean annual CH4 emissions from wetlands through China (CN) and from each specific region (NE, QTP, NCN and SCN) between 2010 and 2013 and the changes caused by wetland dynamics and climate change. The pie chart represents the percentage contribution of wetland CH4 emissions for each specific region to the whole China, and the numbers above the bars represent annual total CH4 emissions for each individual region and whole China; b and c: Correlations between wetland CH4 emission rates and precipitation (b) and temperature (c) for the fixed wetlands (i.e., the areas that remained wetlands from 1978 to 2008). The maps were generated with ArcGIS 10.2, http://www.esri.com/.