de Noblet-Ducoudré, N., E. Poutou, J. Chappellaz, M.T. Coe and G. Krinner, 2002: Indirect relationship between surface water budget and wetland extent, Geophysical Research Letters, 29(4), 51-54.
Abstract:
We used a suite of three models: a global climate model, a hydrological routing scheme, and an empirical parameterisation of methane emissions, to estimate the changes in the surface water budget, extent of natural wetlands and their associated methane emissions at the last interglacial (126000 years ago) and at the last glacial maximum (21000 years ago). At both time periods, in northern tropical Africa as well as in northern South America, our simulations exhibit, in many places, an indirect relationship between the surface water budget and the extent of natural wetlands. In relatively moist regions, decreasing (increasing) rainfall and runoff at the last glacial maximum (last interglacial) result in increased (decreased) wetland area and methane production due to the reduction (increase) in lake depth. This counter-intuitive result has never been hypothesized before and may shed a new light on the interpretation of past methane changes. It also points to the importance of using a bottom-up modelling approach in this field of study.
Center for Sustainability and the Global Environment
Nelson Institute for Environmental Studies
University of Wisconsin-Madison