Sensitivity of Arctic CH$_4$ emissions to landscape wetness diminished by atmospheric feedbacks ...

Simulations using land surface models suggest future increases in Arctic methane emissions to be limited by the thaw-induced drying of permafrost landscapes. Here we use the Max Planck Institute Earth System Model to show that this constraint may be weaker than previously thought owing to compensato...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: De Vrese, Philipp, Beckebanze, Lutz, Galera, Leonardo De Aro, Holl, David, Kleinen, Thomas, Kutzbach, Lars, Rehder, Zoé, Brovkin, Victor
Format: Article in Journal/Newspaper
Language:English
Published: Nature Research 2023
Subjects:
Online Access:https://dx.doi.org/10.5445/ir/1000160965
https://publikationen.bibliothek.kit.edu/1000160965
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Summary:Simulations using land surface models suggest future increases in Arctic methane emissions to be limited by the thaw-induced drying of permafrost landscapes. Here we use the Max Planck Institute Earth System Model to show that this constraint may be weaker than previously thought owing to compensatory atmospheric feedbacks. In two sets of extreme scenario simulations, a modification of the permafrost hydrology resulted in diverging hydroclimatic trajectories that, however, led to comparable methane fluxes. While a wet Arctic showed almost twice the wetland area compared with an increasingly dry Arctic, the latter featured greater substrate availability due to higher temperatures resulting from reduced evaporation, diminished cloudiness and more surface solar radiation. Given the limitations of present-day models and the potential model dependence of the atmospheric response, our results provide merely a qualitative estimation of these effects, but they suggest that atmospheric feedbacks play an important ...