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Separating natural from human enhanced methane emissions in headwater streams
by
Olde, Louise
, Trimmer, Mark
, Zhu, Yizhu
, Collins, Adrian L.
, Heppell, Catherine M.
, Jones, J. Iwan
, Zhang, Yusheng
, Murphy, John F.
, Rovelli, Lorenzo
in
140/58
/ 631/326/171/1878
/ 704/47/4113
/ Agriculture
/ Anthropogenic factors
/ Climate change
/ Emissions
/ Global warming
/ Humanities and Social Sciences
/ Intensive farming
/ Land use
/ Methane
/ multidisciplinary
/ Organic matter
/ Science
/ Science (multidisciplinary)
/ Sediments
/ Streambeds
/ Streams
2022
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Separating natural from human enhanced methane emissions in headwater streams
by
Olde, Louise
, Trimmer, Mark
, Zhu, Yizhu
, Collins, Adrian L.
, Heppell, Catherine M.
, Jones, J. Iwan
, Zhang, Yusheng
, Murphy, John F.
, Rovelli, Lorenzo
in
140/58
/ 631/326/171/1878
/ 704/47/4113
/ Agriculture
/ Anthropogenic factors
/ Climate change
/ Emissions
/ Global warming
/ Humanities and Social Sciences
/ Intensive farming
/ Land use
/ Methane
/ multidisciplinary
/ Organic matter
/ Science
/ Science (multidisciplinary)
/ Sediments
/ Streambeds
/ Streams
2022
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While trying to remove the title from your shelf something went wrong :( Kindly try again later!
Do you wish to request the book?
Separating natural from human enhanced methane emissions in headwater streams
by
Olde, Louise
, Trimmer, Mark
, Zhu, Yizhu
, Collins, Adrian L.
, Heppell, Catherine M.
, Jones, J. Iwan
, Zhang, Yusheng
, Murphy, John F.
, Rovelli, Lorenzo
in
140/58
/ 631/326/171/1878
/ 704/47/4113
/ Agriculture
/ Anthropogenic factors
/ Climate change
/ Emissions
/ Global warming
/ Humanities and Social Sciences
/ Intensive farming
/ Land use
/ Methane
/ multidisciplinary
/ Organic matter
/ Science
/ Science (multidisciplinary)
/ Sediments
/ Streambeds
/ Streams
2022
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Separating natural from human enhanced methane emissions in headwater streams
Journal Article
Separating natural from human enhanced methane emissions in headwater streams
2022
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Overview
Headwater streams are natural sources of methane but are suffering severe anthropogenic disturbance, particularly land use change and climate warming. The widespread intensification of agriculture since the 1940s has increased the export of fine sediments from land to streams, but systematic assessment of their effects on stream methane is lacking. Here we show that excess fine sediment delivery is widespread in UK streams (
n
= 236) and, set against a pre-1940s baseline, has markedly increased streambed organic matter (23 to 100 g m
−2
), amplified streambed methane production and ultimately tripled methane emissions (0.2 to 0.7 mmol CH
4
m
−2
d
−1
,
n
= 29). While streambed methane production responds strongly to organic matter, we estimate the effect of the approximate 0.7 °C of warming since the 1940s to be comparatively modest. By separating natural from human enhanced methane emissions we highlight how catchment management targeting the delivery of excess fine sediment could mitigate stream methane emissions by some 70%.
The effects of fertiliser from intensive agriculture are well recognised, but not so well for fine-sediment. Here we show how widespread ingress of agriculturally derived fine-sediment since the 1940s markedly amplifies methane emissions from streams.
Publisher
Nature Publishing Group UK,Nature Publishing Group,Nature Portfolio
Subject
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