Title of article
Sensitivity of the global submarine hydrate inventory to scenarios of future climate change
Author/Authors
Hunter، نويسنده , , S.J. and Goldobin، نويسنده , , D.S. and Haywood، نويسنده , , A.M. and Ridgwell، نويسنده , , A. and Rees، نويسنده , , J.G.، نويسنده ,
Issue Information
روزنامه با شماره پیاپی سال 2013
Pages
11
From page
105
To page
115
Abstract
The global submarine inventory of methane hydrate is thought to be considerable. The stability of marine hydrates is sensitive to changes in temperature and pressure and once destabilised, hydrates release methane into sediments and ocean and potentially into the atmosphere, creating a positive feedback with climate change. Here we present results from a multi-model study investigating how the methane hydrate inventory dynamically responds to different scenarios of future climate and sea level change. The results indicate that a warming-induced reduction is dominant even when assuming rather extreme rates of sea level rise (up to 20 mm yr−1) under moderate warming scenarios (RCP 4.5). Over the next century modelled hydrate dissociation is focussed in the top ∼ 100 m of Arctic and Subarctic sediments beneath < 500 m water depth. Predicted dissociation rates are particularly sensitive to the modelled vertical hydrate distribution within sediments. Under the worst case business-as-usual scenario (RCP 8.5), upper estimates of resulting global sea-floor methane fluxes could exceed estimates of natural global fluxes by 2100 ( > 30 – 50 Tg CH 4 yr − 1 ) , although subsequent oxidation in the water column could reduce peak atmospheric release rates to 0.75–1.4 Tg CH4 yr−1.
Keywords
anthropogenic , methane hydrate , climate change
Journal title
Earth and Planetary Science Letters
Serial Year
2013
Journal title
Earth and Planetary Science Letters
Record number
2331684
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