2023
DOI: 10.1029/2023jg007679
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Large Methane Emissions From Tree Stems Complicate the Wetland Methane Budget

L. C. Jeffrey,
C. A. Moras,
D. R. Tait
et al.

Abstract: Our understanding of tree stem methane (CH4) emissions is evolving rapidly. Few studies have combined seasonal measurements of soil, water and tree stem CH4 emissions from forested wetlands, inhibiting our capacity to constrain the tree stem CH4 flux contribution to the total wetland CH4 flux. Here we present annual data from a subtropical freshwater Melaleuca quinquenervia wetland forest, spanning an elevational topo‐gradient (Lower, Transitional and Upper zones). Eight field campaigns captured an annual hydr… Show more

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“…Methane emissions from vegetation include plant-mediated emissions through aerenchyma of vascular plants (Chanton et al, 1989;, and tree stem-based methane fluxes from both living and dead trees (Jeffrey, Reithmaier, et al, 2019;Zhang et al, 2022). While emissions are potentially large, global estimates of these pathways remain highly uncertain (Barba et al, 2019;Jeffrey et al, 2023). Oceanic sources comprise coastal and open ocean methane fluxes from brackish and marine sediments.…”
Section: Current Uncertainties In Global Methane Sources and Sinksmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Methane emissions from vegetation include plant-mediated emissions through aerenchyma of vascular plants (Chanton et al, 1989;, and tree stem-based methane fluxes from both living and dead trees (Jeffrey, Reithmaier, et al, 2019;Zhang et al, 2022). While emissions are potentially large, global estimates of these pathways remain highly uncertain (Barba et al, 2019;Jeffrey et al, 2023). Oceanic sources comprise coastal and open ocean methane fluxes from brackish and marine sediments.…”
Section: Current Uncertainties In Global Methane Sources and Sinksmentioning
confidence: 99%