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Anthropogenic Disturbance Stimulates the Export of Dissolved Organic Carbon to Rivers on the Tibetan Plateau

Hui Nai, Jun Zhong, Yuanbi Yi, Manting Lai, Ding He, Thorsten Dittmar, Cong‐Qiang Liu, Si‐Liang Li, Sheng Xu

2023Environmental Science & Technology31 citationsDOI

Abstract

The impacts of human activities on the riverine carbon (C) cycle have only recently been recognized, and even fewer studies have been reported on anthropogenic impacts on C cycling in rivers draining the vulnerable alpine areas. Here, we examined carbon isotopes (δ 13 C DOC and Δ 14 C DOC ), fluorescence, and molecular compositions of riverine dissolved organic matters (DOM) in the Bailong River catchment, the eastern edge of the Tibetan Plateau to identify anthropogenic impacts on the C cycle. Human activities show limited impact on dissolved organic carbon (DOC) concentration, but significantly increased the age of DOC (from modern to ∼1600 yr B.P.) and changed the molecular compositions through agriculture and urbanization despite in the catchment with low population density. Agricultural activities indirectly increased the leaching of N-containing aged organic matter from deep soil to rivers. Urbanization released S-containing aged C from fossil products into rivers directly through wastewater. The aged DOC from agricultural activity and wastewater discharge was partly biolabile and/or photolabile. This study highlights that riverine C is sensitive to anthropogenic disturbance. Additionally, the study also emphasizes that human activities reintroduce aged DOC into the modern C cycle, which would accelerate the geological C cycle.

Topics & Concepts

Dissolved organic carbonCarbon cycleEnvironmental sciencePlateau (mathematics)Drainage basinUrbanizationWater cycleLeaching (pedology)Total organic carbonPopulationCyclingOrganic matterEnvironmental chemistryHydrology (agriculture)EcologyGeographyEcosystemGeologyChemistrySoil waterBiologySoil scienceForestryCartographyMathematicsDemographyMathematical analysisSociologyGeotechnical engineeringMarine and coastal ecosystemsMicrobial Community Ecology and PhysiologyGroundwater and Isotope Geochemistry
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