Environmental Challenges (Apr 2024)

Unveiling the drivers of atmospheric methane variability in Iran: A 20-year exploration using spatiotemporal modeling and machine learning

  • Seyed Mohsen Mousavi,
  • Naghmeh Mobarghaee Dinan,
  • Saeed Ansarifard,
  • Faezeh Borhani,
  • Asef Darvishi,
  • Farhan Mustafa,
  • Amir Naghibi

Journal volume & issue
Vol. 15
p. 100946

Abstract

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Understanding the factors controlling spatial and temporal variability of atmospheric methane concentration (XCH4) is crucial for mitigating its impacts and implementing emission reduction strategies. This study comprehensively investigates XCH4 and its driving factors (environmental, meteorological, and anthropogenic activity) across Iran over 20 years, from 2003 to 2022. It combines multi-source satellite observations, advanced spatiotemporal modeling techniques, correlation analysis, and machine learning algorithms. The spatiotemporal analysis showed notable spatial variation, with high XCH4 levels in central, southern, and eastern Iran and lower levels in the northwest and north. Moreover, distinct seasonal cycles emerged, with maximum XCH4 occurring during summer (August-September) and minimum levels in spring (April-May). Correlation analysis and variable importance assessment were developed to elucidate the key drivers governing XCH4 dynamics. Correlation analysis revealed that vegetation cover, precipitation, and soil moisture were negatively correlated with XCH4, while temperature indices showed a positive correlation, exhibiting the highest correlation in time dispersion and quantity among the studied variables. The Permutation Importance technique, used with a Random Forest classifier, a machine learning-based approach that considers the role of all variables together, showed that land surface temperature, wind speed, soil moisture, and vegetation cover are the dominant controls, with their importance ranked respectively. Surprisingly, anthropogenic emissions played a relatively minor role in shaping XCH4 distributions at the regional scale. These findings highlight the significant influence of meteorological variables and ecosystem processes on XCH4 modulation, revealing intricate Earth system feedbacks that inform targeted mitigation strategies and predictive models for curbing greenhouse gas emissions and mitigating climate change impacts.

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