Aircraft-based inversions quantify the importance of wetlands and livestock for Upper Midwest methane emissions
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Published:2021-01-25
Issue:2
Volume:21
Page:951-971
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ISSN:1680-7324
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Container-title:Atmospheric Chemistry and Physics
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language:en
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Short-container-title:Atmos. Chem. Phys.
Author:
Yu XueyingORCID, Millet Dylan B.ORCID, Wells Kelley C., Henze Daven K., Cao Hansen, Griffis Timothy J., Kort Eric A., Plant Genevieve, Deventer Malte J., Kolka Randall K., Roman D. Tyler, Davis Kenneth J.ORCID, Desai Ankur R.ORCID, Baier Bianca C., McKain KathrynORCID, Czarnetzki Alan C., Bloom A. Anthony
Abstract
Abstract. We apply airborne measurements across three seasons
(summer, winter and spring 2017–2018) in a multi-inversion framework to
quantify methane emissions from the US Corn Belt and Upper Midwest, a key
agricultural and wetland source region. Combing our seasonal results with
prior fall values we find that wetlands are the largest regional methane
source (32 %, 20 [16–23] Gg/d), while livestock (enteric/manure; 25 %,
15 [14–17] Gg/d) are the largest anthropogenic source. Natural
gas/petroleum, waste/landfills, and coal mines collectively make up the
remainder. Optimized fluxes improve model agreement with independent
datasets within and beyond the study timeframe. Inversions reveal coherent
and seasonally dependent spatial errors in the WetCHARTs ensemble mean
wetland emissions, with an underestimate for the Prairie Pothole region but
an overestimate for Great Lakes coastal wetlands. Wetland extent and
emission temperature dependence have the largest influence on prediction
accuracy; better representation of coupled soil temperature–hydrology
effects is therefore needed. Our optimized regional livestock emissions
agree well with the Gridded EPA estimates during spring (to within 7 %) but
are ∼ 25 % higher during summer and winter. Spatial analysis
further shows good top-down and bottom-up agreement for beef facilities (with
mainly enteric emissions) but larger (∼ 30 %) seasonal
discrepancies for dairies and hog farms (with > 40 % manure
emissions). Findings thus support bottom-up enteric emission estimates but
suggest errors for manure; we propose that the latter reflects inadequate
treatment of management factors including field application. Overall, our
results confirm the importance of intensive animal agriculture for regional
methane emissions, implying substantial mitigation opportunities through
improved management.
Funder
U.S. Department of Energy National Aeronautics and Space Administration National Science Foundation
Publisher
Copernicus GmbH
Subject
Atmospheric Science
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