Skip to content

To bring about breakthroughs in international space research

  • Home
  • Onderzoeksvragen
  • Pijlers
  • Missies
  • Over ons
  • Contact
Home
    Home

    SRON | Wetenschappelijk ruimteonderzoek Nederland

    To bring about breakthroughs in international space research

    Home
    • Onderzoeksvragen
    • Pijlers
      • Wetenschap
      • Technologie
      • Instrumentatie
      • Onze mensen
      • Impact
    • Missies
    • Over ons
    • Actueel
    • Contact
    • SRON Academy
    • Werken bij
    • Bezoek aan SRON
    Home
      • Onderzoeksvragen
        • Hoe ontrafelen we de fysica achter zwarte gaten?
        • Hoe kunnen we de zwakste exoplaneten waarnemen?
        • Waar worden broeikasgassen uitgestoten?
        • Hoe speciaal is de aarde in de context van het heelal?
        • Hoe ontstaan en groeien zwarte gaten?
        • Hoe beïnvloeden aerosolen het klimaat?
        • Hoe ontstaan sterren en planeten?
        • Hoe beïnvloedt klimaatverandering het leven op aarde?
      • Pijlers
        • Wetenschap
          • Aardobservatie
            • Methaan
            • Aerosolen en Wolken
            • CO2
            • Koolmonoxide
          • Astrofysica
            • Lage energie
            • Hoge energie
            • Exoplaneten
        • Technologie
        • Instrumentatie
          • Nanotechnologie
          • Cryogenica
          • Optica
          • Electronica
          • PA/QA kwaliteit
          • Mechanica / Realisatie
        • Onze mensen
        • Impact
      • Missies
        • Actief
          • ALMA
          • GUSTO
          • PACE
          • Sentinel-5p
          • SPEX airborne
          • XRISM
        • In ontwikkeling
          • ARIEL
          • LISA
          • Metop-SG A
        • Legacy
          • BeppoSAX
          • STO2
      • Over ons
        • Faciliteiten
        • Geschiedenis
      • Actueel
      • Contact
      • SRON Academy
      • Werken bij
      • Bezoek aan SRON
      • Privacy policy
      01/12/2013

      Stable atmospheric methane in the 2000s: key-role of emissions from natural wetlands

      Two atmospheric inversions (one fine-resolved and one process-discriminating) and a process-based model for land surface exchanges are brought together to analyse the variations of methane emissions from 1990 to 2009. A focus is put on the role of natural wetlands and on the years 2000-2006, a period of stable atmospheric concentrations.

      From 1990 to 2000, the top-down and bottom-up visions agree on the time-phasing of global total and wetland emission anomalies. The process-discriminating inversion indicates that wetlands dominate the time-variability of methane emissions (90% of the total variability). The contribution of tropical wetlands to the anomalies is found to be large, especially during the post-Pinatubo years (global negative anomalies with minima between -41 and -19 Tg yr-1 in 1992) and during the alternate 1997-1998 El-Niño/1998-1999 La-Niña (maximal anomalies in tropical regions between +16 and +22 Tg yr-1 for the inversions and anomalies due to tropical wetlands between +12 and +17 Tg yr-1 for the process-based model).

      Between 2000 and 2006, during the stagnation of methane concentrations in the atmosphere, the top-down and bottom-up approaches agree on the fact that South America is the main region contributing to anomalies in natural wetland emissions, but they disagree on the sign and magnitude of the flux trend in the Amazon basin. A negative trend (-3.9 ± 1.3 Tg yr-1) is inferred by the process-discriminating inversion whereas a positive trend (+1.3 ± 0.3 Tg yr-1) is found by the process model. Although processed-based models have their own caveats and may not take into account all processes, the positive trend found by the B-U approach is considered more likely because it is a robust feature of the process-based model, consistent with analysed precipitations and the satellite-derived extent of inundated areas. On the contrary, the surface-data based inversions lack constraints for South America. This result suggests the need for a re-interpretation of the large increase found in anthropogenic methane inventories after 2000.

      SRON Leiden

      Leiden

      Niels Bohrweg 4
      2333 CA Leiden
      The Netherlands
      +31 (0)88 777 56 00

      SRON Groningen

      Groningen

      Landleven 12
      9747 AD Groningen
      The Netherlands
      +31 (0)50 363 40 74

      • Onderzoeksvragen
      • Pijlers
        • Wetenschap
        • Technologie
        • Instrumentatie
        • Onze mensen
        • Impact
      • Missies
      • Over ons
      • Actueel
      • Contact
      SRON on bluesky SRON on Instagram SRON on LinkedIn

      Niels Bohrweg 4
      2333 CA Leiden
      The Netherlands
      +31 (0)88 777 56 00

      Landleven 12
      9747 AD Groningen
      The Netherlands
      +31 (0)50 363 40 74

      NWO-I

      SRON is onderdeel van de institutenorganisatie van NWO-I

      • Privacy policy
      Home

      What happens up there, starts down here.