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The large role of declining atmospheric sulfate deposition and rising CO2 concentrations in stimulating future wetland CH₄ emissions

Earth Sciences

The large role of declining atmospheric sulfate deposition and rising CO2 concentrations in stimulating future wetland CH₄ emissions

L. Shen, S. Peng, et al.

Using data-driven estimates from 2000–2100, this study shows that biogeochemical feedbacks—especially falling sulfate deposition under clean-air policies and CO₂ fertilization—could drive 30–45% of future wetland methane increases, adding 20–34 Tg yr⁻¹ by 2100 under 1.5–2°C pathways and shrinking the allowable anthropogenic methane budget. Research conducted by Lu Shen, Shushi Peng, Zhen Zhang, Chuan Tong, Jintai Lin, Yang Li, Huiru Zhong, Shuang Ma, Minghao Zhuang, and Vincent Gauci.

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~3 min • Beginner • English
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.
Publisher
Science Advances
Published On
Feb 05, 2025
Authors
Lu Shen, Shushi Peng, Zhen Zhang, Chuan Tong, Jintai Lin, Yang Li, Huiru Zhong, Shuang Ma, Minghao Zhuang, Vincent Gauci
Tags
Wetland methane emissions
Biogeochemical feedbacks
Sulfate deposition
CO₂ fertilization
Climate change scenarios
Anthropogenic methane budget
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