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Researchers discover that rewetting global wetlands effectively reduces major greenhouse gas emissions

Aug 19, 2022

Carbon and nitrogen losses from degraded wetlands and methane emissions from flooded wetlands are both important sources of greenhouse gas emissions. However, the net-exchange dependence on hydrothermal conditions and wetland integrity remains unclear.

Associate Professor Zhenzhong Zeng’s research team in the School of Environmental Science and Engineering at the Southern University of Science and Technology (SUSTech) has recently published their findings on how global wetlands can reduce greenhouse gas emissions. Using global wetland in-situ observations of CO2, CH4, and N2O exchanges, they showed a nonlinear hydrothermal influence on total CO2-equivalent emissions, whereby a near-surface water table produces near neutral greenhouse gas flux across broad temperature gradients.

By extrapolating the current trajectory of degradation, the researchers estimate that between 2021 and 2100, wetlands could result in greenhouse gas emissions equivalent to around 408 gigatons of CO2. However, a volume equivalent to 10% of anthropogenic CO2 emissions could be reduced through wetland restoration, such that the radiative forcing caused by CH4 and N2O is fully compensated by CO2 uptake.

Their research, entitled “Rewetting global wetlands effectively reduces major greenhouse gas emissions”, was published in Nature Geoscience, a journal covering all aspects of the Earth sciences, including theoretical research, modelling, and field work.

Figure 1. An alpine meadow at Qinghai-Tibet Plateau, China

Prof. Zeng’s group constructed a GHG net-flux database to investigate the impact of global widespread wetland degradation on the GHG budget. They were surprised to discover that wetland degradation (i.e., draining/desiccation) resulted in a total GHG emission of 276 gigatons CO2eq from 1950 to 2020. In recent years, CO2, CH4, and N2O emissions from degraded wetlands are equal to 10.8%, -0.5%, and 30.5% of anthropogenic sources for each gas, respectively.

Junyu Zou, a member of the research team, said that the decline in water level changes the anaerobic conditions created by the saturated soil water. The massive organic matter that has been sequestered for a long time will continue to decompose until depletion, a process accompanied by the emission of substantial carbon dioxide and nitrous oxide.

Wetlands host one-third of the global soil organic matter in only 6% of the land surface, yet they have been degrading rapidly during the past half-century. By extrapolating the current trajectory of degradation, wetlands could result in greenhouse gas emissions equivalent to around 408 gigatons of CO2eq from 2021 to 2100.

Compared to the last 70 years, Zou said the geographical pattern of outflow would change in tropical regions. Along with the loss of most soil organic carbon stock, emissions will reduce from 155 Gt to 99 Gt (the percentage decreased from 55% to 24%). At the same time, boreal regions will become the dominant emissions source, increasing from 108 Gt to 290 Gt (39% to 71%).

Prof. Zeng said the nonlinear thermal-wetness influence on wetland GHG fluxes, whereby a near-surface water table produces near-neutral GHG flux across broad temperature gradients, suggests that rewetting wetlands is an effective nature-based solution to mitigate climate change. Two emission reduction scenarios are simulated here: reverse the trend of wetland degradation by only rewetting high soil organic carbon wetlands or rewetting all degraded wetlands to optimum water levels. In doing so, they will reduce emissions by 38% and 63%, respectively. The latter average annual emission reduction is equivalent to 10% of current anthropogenic sources of CO2. The two rewetting scenarios can reduce GHG emissions by 782 tCO2eq ha-1 and 584 tCO2eq ha-1, respectively.

“Considering the limitation of resources invested in the initial stage of wetland conservation at the national or regional level, high organic carbon wetlands (e.g., most peatlands) are a good beginning”, Prof. Zeng said.

Figure 2. Greenhouse gas emissions from degraded wetlands under different scenarios

Junyu Zou, a Ph.D. candidate at SUSTech, is the first author of this paper. Assoc. Prof. Zhenzhong Zeng is the corresponding author. Other members from the SUSTech team included Prof. Chunmiao Zheng, Prof. Zuotai Zhang, Ms. Xinyue He, Ms. Jie Wu, and Mr. Xin Jiang.

Other researchers that contributed to this work included: Prof. Alan D. Ziegler of Mae Jo University (MJU); Prof. Deliang Chen of the University of Gothenburg; Dr. Gavin McNicol of the University of Illinois; Prof. Philippe Ciais of the Laboratoire des Sciences du Climat et de l’Environnement (LSCE); Prof. Jin Wu and Miss Ziyu Lin of the University of Hong Kong (HKU); Prof. Lee E. Brown and Prof. Joseph Holden of the University of Leeds; Dr. Sorain J. Ramchunder of the Singapore Botanic Gardens; and Prof. Anping Chen of Colorado State University (CSU).

This study was supported by the National Natural Science Foundation of China (NSFC) and the Start-Up Fund provided by SUSTech.

Paper link: https://www.nature.com/articles/s41561-022-00989-0