AI Article Synopsis

  • Peatlands are crucial for managing greenhouse gases like methane, carbon dioxide, and nitrous oxide, making it important to understand their spatial distribution for climate change mitigation.
  • Research involved predicting these gases' sinks and sources across Finland using different data types, including field measurements and machine-learning modeling.
  • The study found that combining geospatial environmental and remote sensing data provided the best accuracy for predicting GHG patterns, while relying solely on remote sensing data was less effective.

Article Abstract

Peatlands play a key role in the circulation of the main greenhouse gases (GHG) - methane (CH), carbon dioxide (CO), and nitrous oxide (NO). Therefore, detecting the spatial pattern of GHG sinks and sources in peatlands is pivotal for guiding effective climate change mitigation in the land use sector. While geospatial environmental data, which provide detailed spatial information on ecosystems and land use, offer valuable insights into GHG sinks and sources, the potential of directly using remote sensing data from satellites remains largely unexplored. We predicted the spatial distribution of three major GHGs (CH, CO, and NO) sinks and sources across Finland. Utilizing 143 field measurements, we compared the predictive capacity of three different data sets with MaxEnt machine-learning modeling: (1) geospatial environmental data including climate, topography and habitat variables, (2) remote sensing data (Sentinel-1 and Sentinel-2), and (3) a combination of both. The combined dataset yielded the highest accuracy with an average test area under the receiver operating characteristic curve (AUC) of 0.845 and AUC stability of 0.928. A slightly lower accuracy was achieved using only geospatial environmental data (test AUC 0.810, stability AUC 0.924). In contrast, using only remote sensing data resulted in reduced predictive accuracy (test AUC 0.763, stability AUC 0.927). Our results suggest that (1) reliable estimates of GHG sinks and sources cannot be produced with remote sensing data only and (2) integrating multiple data sources is recommended to achieve accurate and realistic predictions of GHG spatial patterns.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC11306394PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/s00267-024-01965-7DOI Listing

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