Litcius/Paper detail

The importance of hydrology in routing terrestrial carbon to the atmosphere via global streams and rivers

Shaoda Liu, C Kuhn, Giuseppe Amatulli, Kelly S. Aho, David Butman, George H. Allen, Peirong Lin, Ming Pan, Dai Yamazaki, Craig Brinkerhoff, Colin J. Gleason, Xinghui Xia, Peter A. Raymond

2022Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences260 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Significance Stream/river carbon dioxide (CO 2 ) emission has significant spatial and seasonal variations critical for understanding its macroecosystem controls and plumbing of the terrestrial carbon budget. We relied on direct fluvial CO 2 partial pressure measurements and seasonally varying gas transfer velocity and river network surface area estimates to resolve reach-level seasonal variations of the flux at the global scale. The percentage of terrestrial primary production (GPP) shunted into rivers that ultimately contributes to CO 2 evasion increases with discharge across regions, due to a stronger response in fluvial CO 2 evasion to discharge than GPP. This highlights the importance of hydrology, in particular water throughput, in terrestrial–fluvial carbon transfers and the need to account for this effect in plumbing the terrestrial carbon budget.

Topics & Concepts

FluvialEnvironmental scienceSTREAMSHydrology (agriculture)Carbon cycleRouting (electronic design automation)Carbon dioxideAtmosphere (unit)EcologyGeologyEcosystemGeographyGeomorphologyMeteorologyStructural basinBiologyComputer scienceGeotechnical engineeringComputer networkAtmospheric and Environmental Gas DynamicsMarine and coastal ecosystemsClimate variability and models