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Natural and Anthropogenic Methane Emission from Coastal Wetlands of South India

Author

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  • R. PURVAJA

    (Institute for Ocean Management, Anna University, Chennai 600 025, India)

  • R. RAMESH

    (Institute for Ocean Management, Anna University, Chennai 600 025, India)

Abstract

For the first time, the methane emissions from diverse coastal wetlands of South India have been measured. Annual emission rates varied widely, ranging from 3.10 mg/m2/hr (Bay of Bengal) to 21.56 mg/m2/hr (Adyar River), based on nature of the perturbance to each of the ecosystems studied. Distinct seasonality in methane emission was noticed in an unpolluted ecosystem (mangrove: 7.38 mg/m2/hr) and over a twofold increase was evident in the ecosystem that was disturbed by human activities (21.56 mg/m2/hr). The wide ranges in estimate suggest that methanogenesis occurs by both natural and anthropogenic activities in these coastal wetlands. Several physical and chemical factors such as salinity, sulfate, oxygen, and organic matter content influenced methanogenesis to a large degree in each of these ecosystems in addition to individual responses to human-induced stress. For example, there was a clear negative correlation between oxygen availability (0.99), sulfate (0.98), and salinity (0.98) with CH4 emission in the Adyar river ecosystem. Although similar results were obtained for the other wetland ecosystems, CH4 emission was largely influenced by tidal fluctuations, resulting in a concomitant increase in methanogenesis with high sulfate concentrations. This study demonstrates that coastal wetlands are potentially significant sources of atmospheric methane and could be a greater source if anthropogenic perturbations continue at the current rate. RID="" ID="" *Author to whom correspondence should be addressed.

Suggested Citation

  • R. Purvaja & R. Ramesh, 2001. "Natural and Anthropogenic Methane Emission from Coastal Wetlands of South India," Environmental Management, Springer, vol. 27(4), pages 547-557, April.
  • Handle: RePEc:spr:envman:v:27:y:2001:i:4:d:10.1007_s002670010169
    DOI: 10.1007/s002670010169
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