Wolf Julie, Asrar Ghassem R, West Tristram O
USDA-ARS, Adaptive Cropping Systems Laboratory, 10300 Baltimore Ave., Building 001, Room. 342, BARC-WEST, Beltsville, MD, 20705, USA.
Joint Global Change Research Institute, 5825 University Research Court, Suite 3500, College Park, MD, 20740, USA.
Carbon Balance Manag. 2017 Sep 29;12(1):16. doi: 10.1186/s13021-017-0084-y.
Livestock play an important role in carbon cycling through consumption of biomass and emissions of methane. Recent research suggests that existing bottom-up inventories of livestock methane emissions in the US, such as those made using 2006 IPCC Tier 1 livestock emissions factors, are too low. This may be due to outdated information used to develop these emissions factors. In this study, we update information for cattle and swine by region, based on reported recent changes in animal body mass, feed quality and quantity, milk productivity, and management of animals and manure. We then use this updated information to calculate new livestock methane emissions factors for enteric fermentation in cattle, and for manure management in cattle and swine.
Using the new emissions factors, we estimate global livestock emissions of 119.1 ± 18.2 Tg methane in 2011; this quantity is 11% greater than that obtained using the IPCC 2006 emissions factors, encompassing an 8.4% increase in enteric fermentation methane, a 36.7% increase in manure management methane, and notable variability among regions and sources. For example, revised manure management methane emissions for 2011 in the US increased by 71.8%. For years through 2013, we present (a) annual livestock methane emissions, (b) complete annual livestock carbon budgets, including carbon dioxide emissions, and (c) spatial distributions of livestock methane and other carbon fluxes, downscaled to 0.05 × 0.05 degree resolution.
Our revised bottom-up estimates of global livestock methane emissions are comparable to recently reported top-down global estimates for recent years, and account for a significant part of the increase in annual methane emissions since 2007. Our results suggest that livestock methane emissions, while not the dominant overall source of global methane emissions, may be a major contributor to the observed annual emissions increases over the 2000s to 2010s. Differences at regional and local scales may help distinguish livestock methane emissions from those of other sectors in future top-down studies. The revised estimates allow improved reconciliation of top-down and bottom-up estimates of methane emissions, will facilitate the development and evaluation of Earth system models, and provide consistent regional and global Tier 1 estimates for environmental assessments.
牲畜通过消耗生物质和排放甲烷在碳循环中发挥着重要作用。近期研究表明,美国现有的自下而上的牲畜甲烷排放清单,例如那些使用2006年政府间气候变化专门委员会(IPCC)一级牲畜排放因子得出的清单,数值过低。这可能是由于用于制定这些排放因子的信息过时所致。在本研究中,我们根据近期报告的动物体重、饲料质量和数量、牛奶产量以及动物和粪便管理方面的变化,按区域更新牛和猪的相关信息。然后,我们利用这些更新后的信息来计算牛肠道发酵以及牛和猪粪便管理的新的牲畜甲烷排放因子。
使用新的排放因子,我们估算出2011年全球牲畜甲烷排放量为119.1±18.2太克;这一数值比使用IPCC 2006年排放因子得出的数值高出11%,其中肠道发酵甲烷增加了8.4%,粪便管理甲烷增加了36.7%,且不同区域和来源之间存在显著差异。例如,2011年美国经修订的粪便管理甲烷排放量增加了71.8%。对于2013年之前的年份,我们给出了(a)年度牲畜甲烷排放量、(b)完整的年度牲畜碳预算,包括二氧化碳排放量,以及(c)牲畜甲烷和其他碳通量的空间分布,分辨率下探至0.05×0.05度。
我们对全球牲畜甲烷排放的修订后的自下而上估算值与近期报告的近年来的自上而下全球估算值相当,并且占2007年以来年度甲烷排放量增加量的很大一部分。我们的结果表明,牲畜甲烷排放虽然不是全球甲烷排放的主要总体来源,但可能是21世纪头十年到2010年代观测到的年度排放量增加的主要贡献者。区域和地方尺度上的差异可能有助于在未来的自上而下研究中区分牲畜甲烷排放与其他部门的排放。修订后的估算值有助于改进甲烷排放自上而下和自下而上估算值的协调,将促进地球系统模型的开发和评估,并为环境评估提供一致的区域和全球一级估算值。