No items found.
You are viewing the staging site, links to this site not to be shared publicly, use:
Production link

Problem Statement Repository: Atmospheric Methane Research

Assessing Global Soil Methane Sink Capacity

Atmospheric Methane Research problem statements are shared to build community and knowledge around key challenges to accelerate progress.

Submit a problem statementView all problem statements

Author(s)

Qianlai Zhuang (Purdue University)


Published
July 15, 2024

Last Updated
July 25, 2024

This problem statement was submitted to the first round of the Exploratory Grants for Atmospheric Methane Research funding opportunity, and isn't endorsed, edited, or corrected by Spark.

Background Information

Soil microbial CH4 consumption as the second largest sink to the atmospheric CH4 behind hydroxyl radical oxidation plays an important role in reducing its tropospheric burden. Conventional knowledge is that methanotrophs consume CH4 in upland soils that are rich in organic matter (1, 2). The size of this removal from the atmosphere is around 40 million tons per year (3, 4), and it has doubled in the 20th century and will double again by the end of the 21st century (4). The large uncertainty of these quantifications can be constrained by a) using spatially and temporally explicit satellite soil moisture data (e.g., SMAP), b) incorporation of new discoveries on methanotrophs (e.g., high-affinity methanotrophs, HAM) into existing biogeochemistry models (5), c) using increasingly available CH4 consumption data (1) to constrain model parameters, and d) using the remotely sensed atmospheric CH4 data and atmospheric transport and inversion modeling (3, 5).

Problem Articulation

This project will update the assessment of global soil CH4 sink capacity and its uncertainties using the state-of-the-art soil CH4 biogeochemistry and atmospheric transport and inversion modeling. The assessment will be provided for the period of 2016-2024 that has quality satellite data of soil moisture and atmospheric CH4 concentration. The uncertainty information will be derived from uncertain model algorithms, parameterization, and forcing data.

A set of hierarchical biogeochemistry models incorporated with different levels of understanding of microbial processes and controls will be driven with various forcings. The estimated soil sinks will be fed to atmospheric inversion models as a prior to invert the sink as a posterior based on satellite retrieval data of atmospheric CH4 concentration and in situ flask measurements. The inverted sink and atmospheric concentrations will be compared with biogeochemistry model estimates and satellite and in situ concentration data.

Impact Statement

Spatially and temporally explicit assessment of the global soil CH4 sink and the developed modeling tools will significantly help the concerted global efforts to increase soil CH4 sink and reduce its atmospheric concentrations and facilitate the global CH4 cycle studies in several fronts:

  1. The study will provide a benchmark of the global soil sink capacity with the state-of-the-art understanding of soil CH4 sink processes and controls;
  2. The study will guide in situ and satellite and remote sensing observations of CH4 sink and source fluxes to accurately project its future sink and source strengths;

The findings will help enhance soil CH4 sink and reduce its emissions at country and global scales.

References

Additional Information

Provide feedback on problem statements

Related Problem Statements

Stay in touch

Sign up to our Spark newsletter and stay updated!

Your submission has been received!
Oops! Something went wrong while submitting the form.

Methane Removal Community Newsletter signup