2025-02-06 バーミンガム大学
<関連情報>
- https://www.birmingham.ac.uk/news/2025/clean-air-policies-having-unintended-impact-driving-up-wetland-methane-emissions
- https://www.science.org/doi/10.1126/sciadv.adn1056
大気中の硫酸塩沈着量の減少とCO2濃度の上昇が、将来の湿地のCH4排出を刺激する大きな役割 The large role of declining atmospheric sulfate deposition and rising CO2 concentrations in stimulating future wetland CH4 emissions
Lu Shen, Shushi Peng, Zhen Zhang, Chuan Tong, […], and Vincent Gauci
Science Advances Published:5 Feb 2025
Abstract
Existing projections of wetland methane emissions usually neglect feedbacks from global biogeochemical cycles. Using data-driven approaches, we estimate wetland methane emissions from 2000 to 2100, considering effects of meteorological changes and biogeochemical feedbacks from atmospheric sulfate deposition and CO2 fertilization. In low-CO2 scenarios (1.5° and 2°C warming pathways), the suppressive effect of sulfate deposition on wetland methane emissions largely diminishes by 2100 due to clean air policies, with resulting emission increases (7 ± 2 Tg a−1) being 35 and 22% of total wetland emission changes. In mid-CO2 scenarios (2.4° to 3.6°C warming pathways), sulfate deposition changes modestly, and CO2 fertilization contributes >30% of wetland emission increases. Across all scenarios, biogeochemical feedbacks can stimulate 30 to 45% of future wetland emission rises. Under 1.5° and 2°C pathways, wetland methane emissions will likely increase by 20 to 34 Tg a−1 by 2100, representing 8 to 15% of the allowable space for anthropogenic methane emissions, a factor not yet considered by current assessments.