Atmospheric Methane Research problem statements are shared to build community and knowledge around key challenges to accelerate progress.
Submit a problem statementView all problem statementsMcKenzie Kuhn (University of British Columbia)
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.
Northern regions are warming at 4x the rate of the rest of the world (Rantanen et al. 2022), leading to projected increases in methane (CH4) emissions from wetlands and lakes (Turetsky et al. 2019). Northern and alpine tundra and forests are potentially significant CH4 sinks due to their typically dry and well-drained soils (Jørgensen et al. 2015; St. Pierre et al. 2019; Lee et al. 2023; Virkkala et al., 2024) and could offset increasing emissions (Oh et al. 2021). Well-drained ecosystems make up 72% of the northern landscape (Olefeldt et al. 2021), yet the drivers and magnitude of the northern CH4 sink are poorly constrained. Previous northern research is biased towards CH4 emissions hotspots, and assumed CH4 emissions from dry soils were negligible. Thus, CH4 flux measurements from northern alpine ecosystems are extremely rare (Fig. 1; Kuhn et al. 2021), despite their CH4 sink potential (Virkkala et al. 2024; Jørgensen et al., 2024).
Vegetation, soil temperature, and soil moisture influence CH4 uptake (Voigt et al. 2023), but complete understanding of the controls on CH4 uptake, including links to nitrogen, trace metals, pH, gross primary production (carbon dioxide exchange), microbial dynamics, soil carbon, and response to climate-driven vegetation shifts are understudied (D’Imperio et al. 2023; Voigt et al. 2023; Virkkala et al., 2024). Measurements of CH4 uptake, and associated controls, from northern alpine ecosystems will improve our ability to scale CH4 uptake, constrain the northern CH4 sink, and help predict changes in uptake with climate change.
The core problems to be addressed include 1) constraining the unknown magnitude and drivers of the northern alpine CH4 sink and 2) assessing the influence of climate change and shifts in alpine vegetation on CH4 uptake.
Our goals (Fig 1) are to:
Success of the project goals can be assessed through model comparisons and upscaling, uncertainty analysis, and hypothesis testing as well as through the completion of a successful field campaign and published papers.
Our project will improve our understanding of the CH4 uptake in northern alpine environments and will:
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