Compounded effects on wetland greenhouse gas fluxes from climate change and water management along a saline to freshwater gradient

Doughty, C.L., Q. Ying, E. Ward, E. Delaria, G.M. Wolfe, S.L. Malone, D.E. Reed, T. Troxler, J.S. Kominoski, E. Castañeda-Moya, W.B. Shoemaker, D. Yannick, G. Starr, S.F. Oberbauer, A. Barenblitt, A. Campbell, S. Charles, L. Fatoyinbo, J. Gewirtzman, T. Hanisco, R. Hannun, S. Kawa, D. Lagomasino, L. Lait, A. Lindquist, P. Newman, P. Raymond, J. Rosentreter, K. Thornhill, D. Vaughn, and B. Poulter (2026), Compounded effects on wetland greenhouse gas fluxes from climate change and water management along a saline to freshwater gradient, Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci., doi:10.1073/pnas.2513685123.
Abstract

Saline and freshwater wetlands store large amounts of carbon, which has driven interest in their role as nature-based climate solutions. Because these ecosystems can be both sinks and sources of carbon to the atmosphere as environmental conditions and human influence change, the net climate mitigation potential of wetlands at regional to global scales remains uncertain. We used a data-driven approach to measure ground-based and airborne fluxes to upscale carbon dioxide (CO2) and methane (CH4) fluxes using satellite-based surface reflectances at 500-m resolution across a gradient of saline to freshwater wetlands in Southern Florida, USA. Daily time series of CO2 and CH4 fluxes from 2000 to 2024 integrated surface properties related to vegetation productivity, flooding, and disturbance, and captured 80% and 91% of the variability in annual fluxes of CO2 and CH4, respectively. Long-term (23-y) patterns in the fluxes of CH4, CO2, and their CO2-equivalent (CO2eq) are represented as Global Warming Potential 100 (GWP100) and were shown to vary spatially with wetland management, revealing higher carbon uptake in mangroves susceptible to hurricane damage and coastal hydrology, and greater carbon emissions in freshwater sawgrass marshes where freshwater hydrology is managed for restoration. Regional net annual CO2eq uptake in coastal and freshwater wetlands increased by 18% from −7.0 ± 3.3 MMT CO2eq y−1 in ~2003 to −8.4 ± 3.8 MMT CO2eq y−1 in ~2020 at an uptake rate of −0.06 ± 0.01 MMT CO2eq y−2. Annually, roughly 43% of CO2 uptake was offset by CH4 emissions from all wetlands in the region (from 16% in mangroves to 82% in freshwater marshes).

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Research Program
Carbon Cycle & Ecosystems Program (CCEP)
Funding Sources
We would like to acknowledge the support of the NASA Carbon Monitoring System and Terrestrial Ecology Programs toward the BlueFlux field campaign (CMS grant #80NSSC21K1564). We thank the programs which provide support for EC towers in South Florida as part of the Ameriflux network, including the NSF (Award Numbers: 2047687, 2330792, and 1561161), the Florida Coastal Everglades Long Term Ecological Research Program (NSF #DEB-2025954, #DEB-1832229, #DEB-1237517, #DBI-0620409, and #DEB-9910514), ENP (Cooperative Agreement No. P16AC00032 Task Agreement No. P17AC01282), and the USGS Greater Everglades Priority Ecosystem Sciences Program. G.S., S.F.O. and D.Y. towers were supported in part from the Department of Energy’s (DOE) National Institute for Climate Change Research (NICCR) through grant 07-SC-NICCR-1059 and the NSF Division of Atmospheric & Geospace Sciences Atmospheric Chemistry Program (Award Numbers: 1561139, 1233006, 1801310, and 1807533). D.Y. received support from the NSF Graduate Research Fellowship Program (GRFP; fellow #2023348536), and the Alabama Water Institute.