Taillardat et al. (2020) - Restoration cost database V5.xlsx from Climate change mitigation potential of wetlands and the cost-effectiveness of their restoration
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https://rs.figshare.com/articles/Taillardat_et_al_2020_-_Restoration_cost_database_V5_xlsx_from_Climate_change_mitigation_potential_of_wetlands_and_the_cost-effectiveness_of_their_restoration/12553778
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The cost-effective mitigation of climate change through nature-based carbon dioxide removal strategies has gained substantial policy attention. Inland and coastal wetlands (specifically boreal, temperate and tropical peatlands; tundra; floodplains; freshwater marshes; saltmarshes and mangroves) are among the most efficient natural long-term carbon sinks, yet they also release methane (CH<sub>4</sub>) that can offset the carbon they sequester. Here, we conducted a meta-analysis on wetland carbon dynamics to (i) determine the role they play on climate and discuss their suitability for inclusion in greenhouse gas emissions (GHG) mitigation policies; (ii) investigate the cost-effectiveness of wetland restoration for climate change mitigation strategies. Depending on metrics, a wetland can simultaneously be a net carbon sink (i.e. boreal and temperate peatlands net ecosystem carbon budget (NECB) = −28.1 ± 19.13 gC m<sup>−2</sup> y<sup>−1</sup>) but have a net warming effect on climate at the 100 years time-scale (i.e. boreal and temperate peatland sustained global warming potential (SGWP) = 298.2 ± 100.6 gCO<sub>2</sub> eq<sup>−1</sup> m<sup>−2</sup> y<sup>−1</sup>). This ambivalence shows that the choice of metric can lead to misinterpretation on the effect of wetlands on global temperature. Moreover, our review report high heterogeneity and a still limited number of studies that document wetland carbon budgets. In this study, we demonstrate that most coastal and inland wetlands have a net cooling effect as of today. This is explained by the limited CH<sub>4</sub> emissions that undisturbed coastal wetlands produce and the short lifetime of CH<sub>4</sub> in the atmosphere, compared with long-term carbon sequestration for older inland wetlands. Analysis of wetland restoration costs relative to the amount of carbon they can sequester revealed that restoration is more cost-effective in coastal wetlands such as mangroves (US$1800 ton C<sup>−1</sup>) compared with inland wetlands (US$ 4200–49 200 ton C<sup>−1</sup>). For inland wetlands, priority should be given to conservation rather than restoration, while for coastal wetlands, both conservation and restoration may be effective techniques for climate change mitigation.
提供机构:
The Royal Society
创建时间:
2020-06-24



