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Global methane emissions from rivers and streams

Gerard Rocher-Ros (), Emily H. Stanley, Luke C. Loken, Nora J. Casson, Peter A. Raymond, Shaoda Liu, Giuseppe Amatulli and Ryan A. Sponseller
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Gerard Rocher-Ros: Umeå University
Emily H. Stanley: University of Wisconsin–Madison
Luke C. Loken: United States Geological Survey
Nora J. Casson: University of Winnipeg
Peter A. Raymond: Yale University
Shaoda Liu: Yale University
Giuseppe Amatulli: Yale University
Ryan A. Sponseller: Umeå University

Nature, 2023, vol. 621, issue 7979, 530-535

Abstract: Abstract Methane (CH4) is a potent greenhouse gas and its concentrations have tripled in the atmosphere since the industrial revolution. There is evidence that global warming has increased CH4 emissions from freshwater ecosystems1,2, providing positive feedback to the global climate. Yet for rivers and streams, the controls and the magnitude of CH4 emissions remain highly uncertain3,4. Here we report a spatially explicit global estimate of CH4 emissions from running waters, accounting for 27.9 (16.7–39.7) Tg CH4 per year and roughly equal in magnitude to those of other freshwater systems5,6. Riverine CH4 emissions are not strongly temperature dependent, with low average activation energy (EM = 0.14 eV) compared with that of lakes and wetlands (EM = 0.96 eV)1. By contrast, global patterns of emissions are characterized by large fluxes in high- and low-latitude settings as well as in human-dominated environments. These patterns are explained by edaphic and climate features that are linked to anoxia in and near fluvial habitats, including a high supply of organic matter and water saturation in hydrologically connected soils. Our results highlight the importance of land–water connections in regulating CH4 supply to running waters, which is vulnerable not only to direct human modifications but also to several climate change responses on land.

Date: 2023
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DOI: 10.1038/s41586-023-06344-6

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