Abstract. Methane emissions from natural wetlands and rice paddies constitute a large proportion of atmospheric methane, but the magnitude and year-to-year variation of these methane sources is still unpredictable. Here we describe and evaluate the integration of a methane biogeochemical model (CLM4Me; Riley et al., 2011) into the Community Land Model 4.0 (CLM4CN) in order to better explain spatial and temporal variations in methane emissions. We test new functions for soil pH and redox potential that impact microbial methane production in soils. We also constrain aerenchyma in plants in always-inundated areas in order to better represent wetland vegetation. Satellite inundated fraction is explicitly prescribed in the model because there ar...
Wetlands are the largest global natural methane (CH4/ source, and emissions between 50 and 70° N lat...
Atmospheric methane (CH4) accounts for ~20% of the total direct anthropogenic radiative forcing by l...
Wetlands are the largest and most uncertain natural sources of atmospheric methane (CH4). Several pr...
Abstract. Methane emissions from natural wetlands and rice paddies constitute a large proportion of ...
Methane emissions from natural wetlands constitute the largest methane source at present and depend ...
Understanding the temporal and spatial variation of wetland methane emissions is essential to the es...
Wetlands are the single largest natural source of methane (CH4), a powerful greenhouse gas affecting...
Methane is an important greenhouse gas contributing about 22Vo to the greenhouse effect at present. ...
International audienceAbstract. Natural methane (CH4) emissions from wet ecosystems are an important...
Natural wetlands are the largest source of methane emissions, contributing 20–40% of global emission...
Wetlands are the largest individual source of methane (CH_4), but the magnitude and distribution of ...
Natural wetlands are the largest source of methane emissions, contributing 20–40% of global emission...
Wetlands are the largest natural source of methane. The ability to model the emissions of methane fr...
Wetlands are the largest global natural methane (CH4) source, and emissions between 50 and 70° N lat...
An understanding of potential factors controlling methane emissions from natural wetlands is importa...
Wetlands are the largest global natural methane (CH4/ source, and emissions between 50 and 70° N lat...
Atmospheric methane (CH4) accounts for ~20% of the total direct anthropogenic radiative forcing by l...
Wetlands are the largest and most uncertain natural sources of atmospheric methane (CH4). Several pr...
Abstract. Methane emissions from natural wetlands and rice paddies constitute a large proportion of ...
Methane emissions from natural wetlands constitute the largest methane source at present and depend ...
Understanding the temporal and spatial variation of wetland methane emissions is essential to the es...
Wetlands are the single largest natural source of methane (CH4), a powerful greenhouse gas affecting...
Methane is an important greenhouse gas contributing about 22Vo to the greenhouse effect at present. ...
International audienceAbstract. Natural methane (CH4) emissions from wet ecosystems are an important...
Natural wetlands are the largest source of methane emissions, contributing 20–40% of global emission...
Wetlands are the largest individual source of methane (CH_4), but the magnitude and distribution of ...
Natural wetlands are the largest source of methane emissions, contributing 20–40% of global emission...
Wetlands are the largest natural source of methane. The ability to model the emissions of methane fr...
Wetlands are the largest global natural methane (CH4) source, and emissions between 50 and 70° N lat...
An understanding of potential factors controlling methane emissions from natural wetlands is importa...
Wetlands are the largest global natural methane (CH4/ source, and emissions between 50 and 70° N lat...
Atmospheric methane (CH4) accounts for ~20% of the total direct anthropogenic radiative forcing by l...
Wetlands are the largest and most uncertain natural sources of atmospheric methane (CH4). Several pr...