Authors
ER Hotchkiss, RO Hall Jr, RA Sponseller, D Butman, Jonatan Klaminder, Hjalmar Laudon, Martin Rosvall, JJNG Karlsson
Publication date
2015/9
Journal
Nature Geoscience
Volume
8
Issue
9
Pages
696-699
Publisher
Nature Publishing Group UK
Description
Carbon dioxide (CO2) evasion from streams and rivers to the atmosphere represents a substantial flux in the global carbon cycle,,. The proportions of CO2 emitted from streams and rivers that come from terrestrially derived CO2 or from CO2 produced within freshwater ecosystems through aquatic metabolism are not well quantified. Here we estimated CO2 emissions from running waters in the contiguous United States, based on freshwater chemical and physical characteristics and modelled gas transfer velocities at 1463 United States Geological Survey monitoring sites. We then assessed CO2 production from aquatic metabolism, compiled from previously published measurements of net ecosystem production from 187 streams and rivers across the contiguous United States. We find that CO2 produced by aquatic metabolism contributes about 28% of CO2 evasion from streams and rivers with flows between 0.0001 …
Scholar articles
ER Hotchkiss, RO Hall Jr, RA Sponseller, D Butman… - Nature Geoscience, 2015