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Mapping methane reduction potential of tidal wetland restoration in the United States

Environmental Studies and Forestry

Mapping methane reduction potential of tidal wetland restoration in the United States

J. R. Holmquist, M. Eagle, et al.

This fascinating study reveals that restoring coastal wetlands from freshwater to brackish conditions could significantly reduce methane emissions. Conducted by researchers including James R. Holmquist and Meagan Eagle, it highlights the potential for reducing emissions by 0.91 Teragrams of CO2 equivalents annually and maps out nearly 1,800 parcels ripe for tidal reconnection.

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~3 min • Beginner • English
Abstract
Coastal wetlands can emit excess methane in cases where they are impounded and artificially freshened by structures that impede tidal exchange. We provide a new assessment of coastal methane reduction opportunities for the contiguous United States by combining multiple publicly available map layers, reassessing greenhouse gas emissions datasets, and applying scenarios informed by geospatial information system and by surveys of coastal managers. Independent accuracy assessment indicates that coastal impoundments are under-mapped at the national level by a factor of one-half. Restorations of freshwater-impounded wetlands to brackish or saline conditions have the greatest potential climate benefit of all mapped conversion opportunities, but were rarer than other potential conversion events. At the national scale we estimate potential emissions reduction for coastal wetlands to be 0.91 Teragrams of carbon dioxide equivalents year−1, a more conservative assessment compared to previous estimates. We provide a map of 1,796 parcels with the potential for tidal re-connection.
Publisher
Communications Earth & Environment
Published On
Oct 05, 2023
Authors
James R. Holmquist, Meagan Eagle, Rebecca Lee Molinari, Sydney K. Nick, Liana C. Stachowicz, Kevin D. Kroeger
Tags
coastal wetlands
methane emissions
climate benefit
tidal reconnection
greenhouse gases
ecosystem restoration
emission reduction
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