Litcius/Paper detail

Prompt rewetting of drained peatlands reduces climate warming despite methane emissions

Anke Günther, Alexandra Barthelmes, Vytas Huth, Hans Joosten, Gerald Jurasinski, Franziska Koebsch, John Couwenberg

2020Nature Communications427 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Abstract Peatlands are strategic areas for climate change mitigation because of their matchless carbon stocks. Drained peatlands release this carbon to the atmosphere as carbon dioxide (CO 2 ). Peatland rewetting effectively stops these CO 2 emissions, but also re-establishes the emission of methane (CH 4 ). Essentially, management must choose between CO 2 emissions from drained, or CH 4 emissions from rewetted, peatland. This choice must consider radiative effects and atmospheric lifetimes of both gases, with CO 2 being a weak but persistent, and CH 4 a strong but short-lived, greenhouse gas. The resulting climatic effects are, thus, strongly time-dependent. We used a radiative forcing model to compare forcing dynamics of global scenarios for future peatland management using areal data from the Global Peatland Database. Our results show that CH 4 radiative forcing does not undermine the climate change mitigation potential of peatland rewetting. Instead, postponing rewetting increases the long-term warming effect through continued CO 2 emissions.

Topics & Concepts

PeatEnvironmental scienceMethaneGreenhouse gasMethane emissionsClimate changeGlobal warmingGlobal-warming potentialCarbon dioxideHydrology (agriculture)Atmospheric sciencesEcologyGeologyOceanographyBiologyGeotechnical engineeringPeatlands and Wetlands EcologyCoastal wetland ecosystem dynamicsClimate change and permafrost