How northern peatlands influence the Earth's radiative budget: Sustained methane emission versus sustained carbon sequestration

被引:195
作者
Frolking, Steve
Roulet, Nigel
Fuglestvedt, Jan
机构
[1] Univ New Hampshire, Inst Study Earth Oceans & Space, Durham, NH 03824 USA
[2] CICERO, N-0318 Oslo, Norway
[3] McGill Univ, Dept Geog, Montreal, PQ H3A 2K6, Canada
[4] McGill Univ, McGill Sch Environm, Montreal, PQ H3A 2K6, Canada
关键词
D O I
10.1029/2005JG000091
中图分类号
X [环境科学、安全科学];
学科分类号
08 ; 0830 ;
摘要
Northern peatlands sequester carbon and emit methane, and thus have both cooling and warming impacts on the climate system through their influence on atmospheric burdens of CO2 and CH4. These competing impacts are usually compared by the global warming potential (GWP) methodology, which determines the equivalent CO2 annual emission that would have the same integrated radiative forcing impact over a chosen time horizon as the annual CH4 emission. We use a simple model of CH4 and CO2 pools in the atmosphere to extend this analysis to quantify the dynamics, over years to millennia, of the net radiative forcing impact of a peatland that continuously emits CH4 and sequesters C. We find that for observed ratios of CH4 emission to C sequestration (roughly 0.1-2 mol mol(-1)), the radiative forcing impact of a northern peatland begins, at peatland formation, as a net warming that peaks after about 50 years, remains a diminishing net warming for the next several hundred to several thousand years, depending on the rate of C sequestration, and thereafter is or will be an ever increasing net cooling impact. We then use the model to evaluate the radiative forcing impact of various changes in CH4 and/or CO2 emissions. In all cases, the impact of a change in CH4 emissions dominates the radiative forcing impact in the first few decades, and then the impact of the change in CO2 emissions slowly exerts its influence.
引用
收藏
页数:10
相关论文
共 68 条
  • [1] Reconstruction of the carbon balance for microsites in a boreal oligotrophic pine fen, Finland
    Alm, J
    Talanov, A
    Saarnio, S
    Silvola, J
    Ikkonen, E
    Aaltonen, H
    Nykanen, H
    Martikainen, PJ
    [J]. OECOLOGIA, 1997, 110 (03) : 423 - 431
  • [2] [Anonymous], CLIMATE CHANGE 1994
  • [3] Multiple timescales for neutralization of fossil fuel CO2
    Archer, D
    Kheshgi, H
    MaierReimer, E
    [J]. GEOPHYSICAL RESEARCH LETTERS, 1997, 24 (04) : 405 - 408
  • [4] Annual CO2 balance of a subarctic fen in northern Europe:: Importance of the wintertime efflux -: art. no. 4607
    Aurela, M
    Laurila, T
    Tuovinen, JP
    [J]. JOURNAL OF GEOPHYSICAL RESEARCH-ATMOSPHERES, 2002, 107 (D21)
  • [5] REVIEW AND ASSESSMENT OF METHANE EMISSIONS FROM WETLANDS
    BARTLETT, KB
    HARRISS, RC
    [J]. CHEMOSPHERE, 1993, 26 (1-4) : 261 - 320
  • [6] Carbon sequestration in peatland: patterns and mechanisms of response to climate change
    Belyea, LR
    Malmer, N
    [J]. GLOBAL CHANGE BIOLOGY, 2004, 10 (07) : 1043 - 1052
  • [7] Response of climate to regional emissions of ozone precursors: sensitivities and warming potentials
    Berntsen, TK
    Fuglestvedt, JS
    Joshi, MM
    Shine, KP
    Stuber, N
    Ponater, M
    Sausen, R
    Hauglustaine, DA
    Li, L
    [J]. TELLUS SERIES B-CHEMICAL AND PHYSICAL METEOROLOGY, 2005, 57 (04): : 283 - 304
  • [8] Linking land-atmosphere-stream carbon fluxes in a lowland peatland system
    Billett, MF
    Palmer, SM
    Hope, D
    Deacon, C
    Storeton-West, R
    Hargreaves, KJ
    Flechard, C
    Fowler, D
    [J]. GLOBAL BIOGEOCHEMICAL CYCLES, 2004, 18 (01)
  • [9] INSENSITIVITY OF GLOBAL WARMING POTENTIALS TO CARBON-DIOXIDE EMISSION SCENARIOS
    CALDEIRA, K
    KASTING, JF
    [J]. NATURE, 1993, 366 (6452) : 251 - 253
  • [10] Factors controlling large scale variations in methane emissions from wetlands -: art. no. 1414
    Christensen, TR
    Ekberg, A
    Ström, L
    Mastepanov, M
    Panikov, N
    Öquist, M
    Svensson, BH
    Nykänen, H
    Martikainen, PJ
    Oskarsson, H
    [J]. GEOPHYSICAL RESEARCH LETTERS, 2003, 30 (07) : 67 - 1