Mk. Cao et al., GLOBAL CARBON EXCHANGE AND METHANE EMISSIONS FROM NATURAL WETLANDS - APPLICATION OF A PROCESS-BASED MODEL, JOURNAL OF GEOPHYSICAL RESEARCH-ATMOSPHERES, 101(D9), 1996, pp. 14399-14414
Wetlands are one of the most important sources of atmospheric methane
(CH4), but the strength of this source is still highly uncertain. To i
mprove estimates of CH4 emission at the regional and global scales and
predict future variation requires a process-based model integrating t
he controls of climatic and edaphic factors and complex biological pro
cesses over CH4 flux rates. This study used a methane emission model b
ased on the hypothesis that plant primary production and soil organic
matter decomposition act to control the supply of substrate needed by
methanogens; the rate of substrate supply and environmental factors, i
n turn, control the rate of CH4 production, and the balance between CH
4 production and methanotrophic oxidation determines the rate of CH4 e
mission into the atmosphere. Coupled to data sets for climate, vegetat
ion, soil, and wetland distribution, the model was used to calculate s
patial and seasonal distributions of CH4 emissions at a resolution of
1 degrees latitude x 1 degrees longitude. The calculated net primary p
roduction (NPP) of wetlands ranged from 45 g C m(-2) yr(-1) for northe
rn bogs to 820 g C m(-2) yr(-1) for tropical swamps. CH4 emission rate
s from individual gridcells ranged from 0.0 to 661 mg CH4 m(-2) d(-1),
with a mean of 40 mg CH4 m(-2) d(-1) for northern wetland, 150 mg CH4
m(-2) d(-1) for temperate wetland, and 199 mg CH4 m(-2) d(-1) for tro
pical wetland. Total CH4 emission was 92 Tg yr(-1). Sensitivity analys
is showed that the response of CH4 emission to climate change depends
upon the combined effects of soil carbon storage, rate of decompositio
n, soil moisture and activity of methanogens.