핵심 개념
Forests, including upland trees, act as a substantial global sink for atmospheric methane, a potent greenhouse gas, challenging the current understanding of the global methane cycle.
초록
The article discusses the role of vegetation, particularly forests, in the global methane cycle. Methane is a potent greenhouse gas that has contributed significantly to anthropogenic global warming since 1750. To better inform strategies for mitigating methane emissions, it is crucial to accurately identify global methane sources and sinks and understand the factors controlling methane exchange with the atmosphere.
The article highlights the findings of a study by Gauci and colleagues, which measured methane flux at the stems of upland trees along a latitudinal gradient, from tropical forests to 'hemiboreal' forests. The key insights from the study are:
- The measurements reveal a consistent pattern of net methane uptake from the atmosphere by woody surfaces of upland trees.
- When scaled worldwide, this methane uptake by forests represents a substantial sink that is currently missing from the global methane budget.
- This finding challenges the prevailing understanding of the global methane cycle and suggests that the role of vegetation, particularly forests, in methane exchange has been underestimated.
The article emphasizes the importance of this discovery in improving our understanding of the global methane cycle and informing strategies for mitigating methane emissions to address climate change.
통계
Methane has contributed about 23% to anthropogenic greenhouse-gas warming since 1750.
The atmospheric concentration of methane has almost tripled since 1750.
인용구
"Methane has contributed about 23% to anthropogenic greenhouse-gas warming since 1750, and its atmospheric concentration has almost tripled since then1."
"The findings reveal a consistent pattern of net methane uptake from the atmosphere by woody surfaces — and suggest that this uptake, when scaled worldwide, is a substantial sink that is missing from the presently unbalanced global methane budget1."