Tuesday, January 26, 2021
  • Contact Us
  • Privacy Policy
Climate Change News
  • Home
  • Weather
  • Climate Change
  • Global Warming
  • Discussion
No Result
View All Result
Climate Change News
  • Home
  • Weather
  • Climate Change
  • Global Warming
  • Discussion
No Result
View All Result
Climate Change News
No Result
View All Result
Home Global Warming

New research is stark warning to address emissions from potent greenhouse gas — ScienceDaily

January 14, 2021
in Global Warming
2 min read
Climate change responsible for record sea temperature levels — ScienceDaily
585
SHARES
3.2k
VIEWS
Share on FacebookShare on Twitter

Wetlands are the dominant natural source of atmospheric methane, a potent greenhouse gas which is second only to carbon dioxide in its importance to climate change. Anthropogenic climate change is expected to enhance methane emissions from wetlands, resulting in further warming. However, wetland methane feedbacks were not fully assessed in the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC) Fifth Assessment Report, posing a challenge to meeting the global greenhouse gas mitigation goals set under the Paris Agreement.

To understand how wetland methane cycling may evolve and drive climate feedbacks in the future, scientists are increasingly looking to Earth’s past.

“Ice core records indicate that atmospheric methane is very sensitive to climate, but we cannot measure atmospheric methane concentrations beyond them, prior to about 1 million years ago,” said Dr Gordon Inglis, lead author and Royal Society Dorothy Hodgkin Fellow at the University of Southampton.

“Instead, we must rely on indirect ‘proxies’ preserved within the sedimentary record. Proxies are surrogates for climate variables that cannot be measured directly, including geochemical data stored in fossils, minerals or organic compounds.”

The study, which was published in Geology, is the first to directly resolve the relationship between temperature and wetland methane cycling during the Paleocene-Eocene Thermal Maximum (PETM), an ancient warming event that could offer a glimpse into the future.

The authors used a geochemical tool developed at the University of Bristol to analyse organic compounds made by microbes living in ancient soils and peats. During the PETM, they found the ratio of two carbon isotopes changed in these compounds — a change that was likely due to an increased amount of methane in the microbes’ diet.

“We show that the PETM was associated with an increase in wetland methane cycling; if some of this methane escaped into the atmosphere, it would have led to additional planetary warming. Crucially, this could foreshadow changes that the methane cycle will experience in the future due to anthropogenic emissions,” said Dr Gordon Inglis.

“Our colleagues have previously shown the inclusion of methane emissions in climate model simulations is critical for interpreting past warmth. However, until recently, there have been no tools to test these predictions. This study confirms that methane cycling increased during the PETM, and perhaps during other warming events in Earth history,” said Professor Rich Pancost, Head of the School of Earth Sciences at the University of Bristol.

Intriguingly, proxies for temperature and methane cycling are only coupled at the onset of this ancient warming event, with the methane proxies rapidly returning to pre-event values even though temperatures remain high for the duration of the PETM. This suggests it is the onset of rapid global warming that is particularly disruptive to methane cycling in wetlands, a finding that is particularly concerning given the rapid global warming we are experiencing now.

Story Source:

Materials provided by University of Bristol. Note: Content may be edited for style and length.

Credit: Source link

You might also like

New outlook for spring: warmer, drier than normal

Letters from our readers

Internal watchdog to probe Trump officials who cast doubt on climate science

Share234Tweet146
Previous Post

CIA Releases All Their UFO X Files – Watts Up With That?

Next Post

Spotty report card on climate for top asset managers

Related Posts

New outlook for spring: warmer, drier than normal
Global Warming

New outlook for spring: warmer, drier than normal

January 26, 2021
Letters from our readers
Global Warming

Letters from our readers

January 26, 2021
Internal watchdog to probe Trump officials who cast doubt on climate science
Global Warming

Internal watchdog to probe Trump officials who cast doubt on climate science

January 26, 2021
Ice loss around the world is being driven by global warming
Global Warming

Ice loss around the world is being driven by global warming

January 26, 2021
Load More
Next Post
Spotty report card on climate for top asset managers

Spotty report card on climate for top asset managers

Leave a Reply Cancel reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

Recommended

Plant a tree and save the world?

Plant a tree and save the world?

July 12, 2020
Consumers don’t realize plant-based diets affect climate change

Consumers don’t realize plant-based diets affect climate change

February 17, 2020

Don't miss it

Geologist Examines 10,800-Year-Old Tree Trunk Found Under Alps’ Glacier
Climate Change

Geologist Examines 10,800-Year-Old Tree Trunk Found Under Alps’ Glacier

January 20, 2021
Climate Change: Global Spending on Energy Transition Hits Record $500 Billion
Global Warming

Climate Change: Global Spending on Energy Transition Hits Record $500 Billion

January 20, 2021
Global Warming will Impact Children’s Nutrition – Watts Up With That?
Weather

Global Warming will Impact Children’s Nutrition – Watts Up With That?

January 20, 2021
Hibernating lemurs may be the key to cryogenic sleep for human space travel – Watts Up With That?
Weather

Hibernating lemurs may be the key to cryogenic sleep for human space travel – Watts Up With That?

January 24, 2021
“the only country to have undertaken … successful … population control is China” – Watts Up With That?
Weather

“the only country to have undertaken … successful … population control is China” – Watts Up With That?

January 26, 2021
‘Ocean Acidification’ – Watts Up With That?
Weather

‘Ocean Acidification’ – Watts Up With That?

January 24, 2021
Climate Change News

ClimateChange.Live is an online news portal which aims to share Daily Climate News Updates, Global Warming and Weather News. Feel free to get in touch with us!

Whats New Here

  • “the only country to have undertaken … successful … population control is China” – Watts Up With That?
  • New outlook for spring: warmer, drier than normal
  • Letters from our readers

Subscribe NOW

© 2019 ClimateChange.Live - All rights reserved!

No Result
View All Result
  • Home
  • Weather
  • Climate Change
  • Global Warming
  • Discussion

© 2019 ClimateChange.Live - All rights reserved!

Feel free to subscribe now!