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Featured researches published by John M. Henderson.


Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2016

Cold season emissions dominate the Arctic tundra methane budget

Donatella Zona; Beniamino Gioli; R. Commane; Jakob Lindaas; Steven C. Wofsy; Charles E. Miller; Steven J. Dinardo; Sigrid Dengel; Colm Sweeney; Anna Karion; Rachel Chang; John M. Henderson; Patrick C. Murphy; Jordan Paul Goodrich; Virginie Moreaux; Anna Liljedahl; Jennifer D. Watts; John S. Kimball; David A. Lipson; Walter C. Oechel

Significance Arctic ecosystems are major global sources of methane. We report that emissions during the cold season (September to May) contribute ≥50% of annual sources of methane from Alaskan tundra, based on fluxes obtained from eddy covariance sites and from regional fluxes calculated from aircraft data. The largest emissions were observed at the driest site (<5% inundation). Emissions of methane in the cold season are linked to the extended “zero curtain” period, where soil temperatures are poised near 0 °C, indicating that total emissions are very sensitive to soil climate and related factors, such as snow depth. The dominance of late season emissions, sensitivity to soil conditions, and importance of dry tundra are not currently simulated in most global climate models. Arctic terrestrial ecosystems are major global sources of methane (CH4); hence, it is important to understand the seasonal and climatic controls on CH4 emissions from these systems. Here, we report year-round CH4 emissions from Alaskan Arctic tundra eddy flux sites and regional fluxes derived from aircraft data. We find that emissions during the cold season (September to May) account for ≥50% of the annual CH4 flux, with the highest emissions from noninundated upland tundra. A major fraction of cold season emissions occur during the “zero curtain” period, when subsurface soil temperatures are poised near 0 °C. The zero curtain may persist longer than the growing season, and CH4 emissions are enhanced when the duration is extended by a deep thawed layer as can occur with thick snow cover. Regional scale fluxes of CH4 derived from aircraft data demonstrate the large spatial extent of late season CH4 emissions. Scaled to the circumpolar Arctic, cold season fluxes from tundra total 12 ± 5 (95% confidence interval) Tg CH4 y−1, ∼25% of global emissions from extratropical wetlands, or ∼6% of total global wetland methane emissions. The dominance of late-season emissions, sensitivity to soil environmental conditions, and importance of dry tundra are not currently simulated in most global climate models. Because Arctic warming disproportionally impacts the cold season, our results suggest that higher cold-season CH4 emissions will result from observed and predicted increases in snow thickness, active layer depth, and soil temperature, representing important positive feedbacks on climate warming.


Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2014

Methane emissions from Alaska in 2012 from CARVE airborne observations

Rachel Chang; Charles E. Miller; Steven J. Dinardo; Anna Karion; Colm Sweeney; Bruce C. Daube; John M. Henderson; Marikate Mountain; Janusz Eluszkiewicz; J. B. Miller; Lori Bruhwiler; Steven C. Wofsy

Significance Alaska emitted 2.1 ± 0.5 Tg CH4 during the 2012 growing season, an unexceptional amount despite widespread permafrost thaw and other evidence of climate change in the region. Our results are based on more than 30 airborne measurement flights conducted by CARVE from May to September 2012 over Alaska. Methane emissions peaked in summer and remained high in to the fall. Emissions from boreal regions were notably larger than from North Slope tundra. To our knowledge, this is the first regional study of methane emissions from Arctic and boreal regions over a growing season. Our estimates reinforce and refine global models, and they provide an important baseline against which to measure future changes associated with climate change. We determined methane (CH4) emissions from Alaska using airborne measurements from the Carbon Arctic Reservoirs Vulnerability Experiment (CARVE). Atmospheric sampling was conducted between May and September 2012 and analyzed using a customized version of the polar weather research and forecast model linked to a Lagrangian particle dispersion model (stochastic time-inverted Lagrangian transport model). We estimated growing season CH4 fluxes of 8 ± 2 mg CH4⋅m−2⋅d−1 averaged over all of Alaska, corresponding to fluxes from wetlands of 56−13+22 mg CH4⋅m−2⋅d−1 if we assumed that wetlands are the only source from the land surface (all uncertainties are 95% confidence intervals from a bootstrapping analysis). Fluxes roughly doubled from May to July, then decreased gradually in August and September. Integrated emissions totaled 2.1 ± 0.5 Tg CH4 for Alaska from May to September 2012, close to the average (2.3; a range of 0.7 to 6 Tg CH4) predicted by various land surface models and inversion analyses for the growing season. Methane emissions from boreal Alaska were larger than from the North Slope; the monthly regional flux estimates showed no evidence of enhanced emissions during early spring or late fall, although these bursts may be more localized in time and space than can be detected by our analysis. These results provide an important baseline to which future studies can be compared.


Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2017

Carbon dioxide sources from Alaska driven by increasing early winter respiration from Arctic tundra

R. Commane; Jakob Lindaas; Joshua Benmergui; Kristina A. Luus; Rachel Chang; Bruce C. Daube; Eugénie S. Euskirchen; John M. Henderson; Anna Karion; J. B. Miller; Scot M. Miller; N. C. Parazoo; James T. Randerson; Colm Sweeney; Pieter P. Tans; Kirk Thoning; Sander Veraverbeke; Charles E. Miller; Steven C. Wofsy

Significance Rising arctic temperatures could mobilize reservoirs of soil organic carbon trapped in permafrost. We present the first quantitative evidence for large, regional-scale early winter respiration flux, which more than offsets carbon uptake in summer in the Arctic. Data from the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration’s Barrow station indicate that October through December emissions of CO2 from surrounding tundra increased by 73% since 1975, supporting the view that rising temperatures have made Arctic ecosystems a net source of CO2. It has been known for over 50 y that tundra soils remain unfrozen and biologically active in early winter, yet many Earth System Models do not correctly represent this phenomenon or the associated CO2 emissions, and hence they underestimate current, and likely future, CO2 emissions under climate change. High-latitude ecosystems have the capacity to release large amounts of carbon dioxide (CO2) to the atmosphere in response to increasing temperatures, representing a potentially significant positive feedback within the climate system. Here, we combine aircraft and tower observations of atmospheric CO2 with remote sensing data and meteorological products to derive temporally and spatially resolved year-round CO2 fluxes across Alaska during 2012–2014. We find that tundra ecosystems were a net source of CO2 to the atmosphere annually, with especially high rates of respiration during early winter (October through December). Long-term records at Barrow, AK, suggest that CO2 emission rates from North Slope tundra have increased during the October through December period by 73% ± 11% since 1975, and are correlated with rising summer temperatures. Together, these results imply increasing early winter respiration and net annual emission of CO2 in Alaska, in response to climate warming. Our results provide evidence that the decadal-scale increase in the amplitude of the CO2 seasonal cycle may be linked with increasing biogenic emissions in the Arctic, following the growing season. Early winter respiration was not well simulated by the Earth System Models used to forecast future carbon fluxes in recent climate assessments. Therefore, these assessments may underestimate the carbon release from Arctic soils in response to a warming climate.


Global Biogeochemical Cycles | 2015

Black carbon aerosol dynamics and isotopic composition in Alaska linked with boreal fire emissions and depth of burn in organic soils

G. O. Mouteva; Claudia I. Czimczik; Simon M. Fahrni; E. B. Wiggins; Brendan M. Rogers; Sander Veraverbeke; Xiaomei Xu; Guaciara M. Santos; John M. Henderson; Charles E. Miller; James T. Randerson

Author(s): Mouteva, GO; Czimczik, CI; Fahrni, SM; Wiggins, EB; Rogers, BM; Veraverbeke, S; Xu, X; Santos, GM; Henderson, J; Miller, CE; Randerson, JT | Abstract:


Global Biogeochemical Cycles | 2016

A multiyear estimate of methane fluxes in Alaska from CARVE atmospheric observations

Scot M. Miller; Charles E. Miller; R. Commane; Rachel Chang; Steven J. Dinardo; John M. Henderson; Anna Karion; Jakob Lindaas; Joe R. Melton; J. B. Miller; Colm Sweeney; Steven C. Wofsy; Anna M. Michalak

Methane (CH4) fluxes from Alaska and other arctic regions may be sensitive to thawing permafrost and future climate change, but estimates of both current and future fluxes from the region are uncertain. This study estimates CH4 fluxes across Alaska for 2012-2014 using aircraft observations from the Carbon in Arctic Reservoirs Vulnerability Experiment (CARVE) and a geostatistical inverse model (GIM). We find that a simple flux model based on a daily soil temperature map and a static map of wetland extent reproduces the atmospheric CH4 observations at the state-wide, multi-year scale more effectively than global-scale, state-of-the-art process-based models. This result points to a simple and effective way of representing CH4 flux patterns across Alaska. It further suggests that contemporary process-based models can improve their representation of key processes that control fluxes at regional scales, and that more complex processes included in these models cannot be evaluated given the information content of available atmospheric CH4 observations. In addition, we find that CH4 emissions from the North Slope of Alaska account for 24% of the total statewide flux of 1.74 ± 0.44 Tg CH4 (for May-Oct.). Contemporary global-scale process models only attribute an average of 3% of the total flux to this region. This mismatch occurs for two reasons: process models likely underestimate wetland area in regions without visible surface water, and these models prematurely shut down CH4 fluxes at soil temperatures near 0°C. As a consequence, wetlands covered by vegetation and wetlands with persistently cold soils could be larger contributors to natural CH4 fluxes than in process estimates. Lastly, we find that the seasonality of CH4 fluxes varied during 2012-2014, but that total emissions did not differ significantly among years, despite substantial differences in soil temperature and precipitation; year-to-year variability in these environmental conditions did not affect obvious changes in total CH4 fluxes from the state.


Journal of Geophysical Research | 2016

The influence of daily meteorology on boreal fire emissions and regional trace gas variability

E. B. Wiggins; Sander Veraverbeke; John M. Henderson; Anna Karion; J. B. Miller; Jakob Lindaas; R. Commane; Colm Sweeney; Kristina A. Luus; M. G. Tosca; Steven J. Dinardo; S. C. Wofsy; Charles E. Miller; James T. Randerson

Author(s): Wiggins, EB; Veraverbeke, S; Henderson, JM; Karion, A; Miller, JB; Lindaas, J; Commane, R; Sweeney, C; Luus, KA; Tosca, MG; Dinardo, SJ; Wofsy, S; Miller, CE; Randerson, JT | Abstract: ©2016. American Geophysical Union. All Rights Reserved. Relationships between boreal wildfire emissions and day-to-day variations in meteorological variables are complex and have important implications for the sensitivity of high-latitude ecosystems to climate change. We examined the influence of environmental conditions on boreal fire emissions and fire contributions to regional trace gas variability in interior Alaska during the summer of 2013 using two types of analysis. First, we quantified the degree to which meteorological and fire weather indices explained regional variability in fire activity using four different products, including active fires, fire radiative power, burned area, and carbon emissions. Second, we combined daily emissions from the Alaskan Fire Emissions Database (AKFED) with the coupled Polar Weather Research and Forecasting/Stochastic Time-Inverted Lagrangian Transport model to estimate fire contributions to trace gas concentration measurements at the Carbon in Arctic Reservoirs Vulnerability Experiment-NOAA Global Monitoring Division (CRV) tower in interior Alaska. Tower observations during two high fire periods were used to estimate CO and CH4 emission factors. We found that vapor pressure deficit and temperature had a level of performance similar to more complex fire weather indices. Emission factors derived from CRV tower measurements were 134 ± 25 g CO per kg of combusted biomass and 7.74 ± 1.06 g CH4 per kg of combusted biomass. Predicted daily CO mole fractions from AKFED emissions were moderately correlated with CRV observations (r = 0.68) and had a high bias. The modeling system developed here allows for attribution of emission factors to individual fires and has the potential to improve our understanding of regional CO, CH4, and CO2 budgets.


Atmospheric Chemistry and Physics | 2014

Atmospheric transport simulations in support of the Carbon in Arctic Reservoirs Vulnerability Experiment (CARVE)

John M. Henderson; Janusz Eluszkiewicz; Marikate Mountain; Thomas Nehrkorn; Rachel Chang; A. Karion; J. B. Miller; Colm Sweeney; Nicholas Steiner; S. C. Wofsy; Charles E. Miller


Atmospheric Chemistry and Physics | 2015

Investigating Alaskan methane and carbon dioxide fluxes using measurements from the CARVE tower

Anna Karion; Colm Sweeney; J. B. Miller; Arlyn E. Andrews; R. Commane; Steven J. Dinardo; John M. Henderson; Jacob Lindaas; John C. Lin; Kristina A. Luus; Tim Newberger; Pieter P. Tans; Steven C. Wofsy; Sonja Wolter; Charles E. Miller


Atmospheric Chemistry and Physics | 2017

Estimating regional-scale methane flux and budgets using CARVE aircraft measurements over Alaska

Sean Hartery; R. Commane; Jakob Lindaas; Colm Sweeney; John M. Henderson; Marikate Mountain; Nicholas Steiner; Kyle C. McDonald; Steven J. Dinardo; Charles E. Miller; Steven C. Wofsy; Rachel Chang


Journal of Geophysical Research | 2016

The influence of daily meteorology on boreal fire emissions and regional trace gas variability: Boreal Fire Emissions

E. B. Wiggins; Sander Veraverbeke; John M. Henderson; Anna Karion; J. B. Miller; Jakob Lindaas; R. Commane; Colm Sweeney; Kristina A. Luus; M. G. Tosca; Steven J. Dinardo; S. C. Wofsy; Charles E. Miller; James T. Randerson

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Charles E. Miller

California Institute of Technology

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Colm Sweeney

National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration

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Anna Karion

National Institute of Standards and Technology

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Steven J. Dinardo

California Institute of Technology

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