Wetlands are the largest natural source of atmospheric methane (CH4), and their emissions are projected to increase during the 21st century in response to climate change. However, how extreme climate events such as extreme heat, extreme precipitation, and their compound occurrences modulate future wetland methane emissions, remains poorly constrained. Here, we quantify the impacts of extreme temperature, precipitation, and compound hot–wet events on global wetland methane emissions (eCH4) using simulations from the dynamic global vegetation model LPJ-wsl driven by four CMIP5 climate models under a high-emission scenario (RCP8.5) for the period 2006–2099. Our results show that extreme heat events intensify and become substantially more frequent, with global occurrence increasing by more than 303% by the end of the century. Correspondingly, their contribution to global wetland methane emissions rises from ~26–28% in 2006 to ~73–83% by 2099, making extreme heat the dominant driver of future eCH4 increases. Extreme precipitation events exhibit relatively modest changes in frequency and mixed intensity. In contrast, compound hot–wet events, despite their low baseline frequency, increase by more than 600% and are associated with disproportionately strong methane responses, driven by the combined effects of elevated temperatures and enhanced anaerobic conditions. Across all event types, tropical wetlands account for 75–90% of global methane emissions, while contributions from mid-latitudes increase modestly and high-latitude contributions remain comparatively small. These findings highlight the emerging importance of climate extremes—particularly extreme heat and compound hot–wet events—in shaping future wetland methane emissions. Explicit consideration of extreme-event dynamics is therefore essential for improving projections of methane–climate feedback under continued global warming.
Deng et al. (Fri,) studied this question.