Communications Earth & Environment (Aug 2024)

Wetland hydrological dynamics and methane emissions

  • Shihao Cui,
  • Pengfei Liu,
  • Haonan Guo,
  • Claudia Kalla Nielsen,
  • Johannes Wilhelmus Maria Pullens,
  • Qing Chen,
  • Lorenzo Pugliese,
  • Shubiao Wu

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1038/s43247-024-01635-w
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 5, no. 1
pp. 1 – 17

Abstract

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Abstract Wetlands are the largest and most uncertain biological source of atmospheric methane, with hydrological fluctuations exacerbating this uncertainty. Here we critically explore the complex relationship between hydrological fluctuations and methane emissions in wetlands by integrating observations from 31 FLUXNET wetland sites with a comprehensive literature review. We present the prevalence and patterns of water table fluctuations and their contribution to uncertainty in methane fluxes. We also highlight key pathways through which these fluctuations affect methane production and emission, such as soil redox heterogeneity, changes in substrate availability and alternative electron acceptor pool, the contribution of different methane transport pathways, and the non-linear responses of community structure and activity of methanogens and methanotrophs to hydrological fluctuations. This review aims to improve the accuracy of wetland methane emission reports by carefully assessing biogeochemical kinetics under hydrological fluctuations.