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Publication | Open Access

Large increases in methane emissions expected from North America’s largest wetland complex

50

Citations

90

References

2023

Year

Abstract

Natural methane (CH<sub>4</sub>) emissions from aquatic ecosystems may rise because of human-induced climate warming, although the magnitude of increase is highly uncertain. Using an exceptionally large CH<sub>4</sub> flux dataset (~19,000 chamber measurements) and remotely sensed information, we modeled plot- and landscape-scale wetland CH<sub>4</sub> emissions from the Prairie Pothole Region (PPR), North America's largest wetland complex. Plot-scale CH<sub>4</sub> emissions were driven by hydrology, temperature, vegetation, and wetland size. Historically, landscape-scale PPR wetland CH<sub>4</sub> emissions were largely dependent on total wetland extent. However, regardless of future wetland extent, PPR CH<sub>4</sub> emissions are predicted to increase by two- or threefold by 2100 under moderate or severe warming scenarios, respectively. Our findings suggest that international efforts to decrease atmospheric CH<sub>4</sub> concentrations should jointly account for anthropogenic and natural emissions to maintain climate mitigation targets to the end of the century.

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