Key Environmental and Ecological Variables of Wetland CH4 and CO2 Fluxes Change With Warming
2025
Mengze Li | Fa Li | Avni Malhotra | Sara H. Knox | Rafael Stern | Robert B. Jackson
Abstract Wetlands are important ecosystems for the global carbon cycle, impacting regional and global methane (CH4) and carbon dioxide (CO2) budgets. This study examines how environmental and ecological variables impact wetland CH4 flux and net ecosystem exchange of CO2 (NEE) across 17 sites globally. We also quantified the importance of variables for each wetland type and site at monthly scale under normal and warm temperatures using dominance analysis. We identified soil and air temperature (TS, TA, respectively) as key variables influencing wetland CH4, and latent heat (LE) and shortwave radiation (SW) for NEE under normal and warm conditions. However, the importance of some variables shifted with warming. For predicting the variability of wetland CH4 flux under warming, gross primary productivity (GPP) and LE, replacing wind direction (WD), were dominant variables for tropical swamps, while NEE was important for high‐latitude fens and bogs under warm temperatures. For wetland NEE, the role of TA and TS decreased across all wetland types with warming, while vapor pressure deficit (VPD) became more important for mid and high‐latitude wetlands. Our results reveal the complex responses of wetland carbon flux to environmental and ecological variables with warming and provide new insights into improving wetland models by incorporating additional variables and accounting for the changing roles of variables in carbon flux under warming.
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