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    | Titel | Constraining global methane emissions and uptake by ecosystems |  
    | VerfasserIn | R. Spahni, R. Wania, L. Neef, M. Weele, I. Pison, P. Bousquet, C. Frankenberg, P. N. Foster, F. Joos, I. C. Prentice, P. Velthoven |  
    | Medientyp | Artikel 
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    | Sprache | Englisch 
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    | ISSN | 1726-4170 
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    | Digitales Dokument | URL |  
    | Erschienen | In: Biogeosciences ; 8, no. 6 ; Nr. 8, no. 6 (2011-06-23), S.1643-1665 |  
    | Datensatznummer | 250005962 
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    | Publikation (Nr.) |  copernicus.org/bg-8-1643-2011.pdf |  
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        | Zusammenfassung |  
        | Natural methane (CH4) emissions from wet ecosystems are an
      important part of today's global CH4 budget. Climate affects
      the exchange of CH4 between ecosystems and the atmosphere by
      influencing CH4 production, oxidation, and transport in the
      soil. The net CH4 exchange depends on ecosystem hydrology,
      soil and vegetation characteristics. Here, the LPJ-WHyMe global
      dynamical vegetation model is used to simulate global net CH4
      emissions for different ecosystems: northern peatlands
      (45°–90° N), naturally inundated wetlands
      (60° S–45° N), rice agriculture and wet mineral
      soils. Mineral soils are a potential CH4 sink, but can also be
      a source with the direction of the net exchange depending on soil
      moisture content. The geographical and seasonal distributions are
      evaluated against multi-dimensional atmospheric inversions for
      2003–2005, using two independent four-dimensional variational
      assimilation systems. The atmospheric inversions are constrained by
      the atmospheric CH4 observations of the SCIAMACHY satellite
      instrument and global surface networks. Compared to LPJ-WHyMe the
      inversions result in a~significant reduction in the emissions from
      northern peatlands and suggest that LPJ-WHyMe maximum annual emissions
      peak about one month late. The inversions do not put strong
      constraints on the division of sources between inundated wetlands and
      wet mineral soils in the tropics. Based on the inversion results we
      diagnose model parameters in LPJ-WHyMe and simulate the surface exchange
      of CH4 over the period 1990–2008. Over the whole period we
      infer an increase of global ecosystem CH4 emissions of
      +1.11 Tg CH4 yr−1, not considering potential
      additional changes in wetland extent. The increase in simulated
      CH4 emissions is attributed to enhanced soil respiration
      resulting from the observed rise in land temperature and in
      atmospheric carbon dioxide that were used as input. The long-term
      decline of the atmospheric CH4 growth rate from 1990 to 2006
      cannot be fully explained with the simulated ecosystem
      emissions. However, these emissions show an increasing trend of
      +3.62 Tg CH4 yr−1 over 2005–2008 which can
      partly explain the renewed increase in atmospheric CH4
      concentration during recent years. |  
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