“…For example, temperature sensitivity scalars have been proposed based on observed CH 4 emissions (Yvon-Durocher et al, 2014). However, in situ observations reveal high variability and uncertainty in CH 4 emissions even with nearly identical environmental conditions (Chadburn et al, 2020;Granberg et al, 1997;Hemes et al, 2018;Koch et al, 2014;Rinne et al, 2018;Villa et al, 2021;Zona et al, 2016), implying much more complex functional relationships between CH emissions and environmental and biological factors. A few ecosystem models explicitly represent more of the underlying microbial, plant, and abiotic processes leading to wetland CH 4 emissions (e.g., ecosys (Grant et al, 2015;Grant et al, 2017a;Grant et al, 2017b), BAMS4 (Pasut et al, 2021), andJSBACH-methane (Castro-Morales et al, 2018)) and confirm that these nonlinear interactions should be considered to improve model predictions of methane emissions (Chang et al, 2019).…”