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Inorganic carbon loading as a primary driver of dissolved carbon dioxide concentrations in the lakes and reservoirs of the contiguous United States
Author(s) -
McDonald Cory P.,
Stets Edward G.,
Striegl Robert G.,
Butman David
Publication year - 2013
Publication title -
global biogeochemical cycles
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 2.512
H-Index - 187
eISSN - 1944-9224
pISSN - 0886-6236
DOI - 10.1002/gbc.20032
Subject(s) - dissolved organic carbon , environmental science , supersaturation , carbon cycle , total inorganic carbon , carbon dioxide , primary production , carbon fibers , ecosystem , environmental chemistry , total organic carbon , aquatic ecosystem , flux (metallurgy) , productivity , atmosphere (unit) , hydrology (agriculture) , ecology , chemistry , geology , meteorology , biology , materials science , geotechnical engineering , macroeconomics , organic chemistry , composite number , economics , composite material , physics
Accurate quantification of CO 2 flux across the air‐water interface and identification of the mechanisms driving CO 2 concentrations in lakes and reservoirs is critical to integrating aquatic systems into large‐scale carbon budgets, and to predicting the response of these systems to changes in climate or terrestrial carbon cycling. Large‐scale estimates of the role of lakes and reservoirs in the carbon cycle, however, typically must rely on aggregation of spatially and temporally inconsistent data from disparate sources. We performed a spatially comprehensive analysis of CO 2 concentration and air‐water fluxes in lakes and reservoirs of the contiguous United States using large, consistent data sets, and modeled the relative contribution of inorganic and organic carbon loading to vertical CO 2 fluxes. Approximately 70% of lakes and reservoirs are supersaturated with respect to the atmosphere during the summer (June–September). Although there is considerable interregional and intraregional variability, lakes and reservoirs represent a net source of CO 2 to the atmosphere of approximately 40 Gg C d –1 during the summer. While in‐lake CO 2 concentrations correlate with indicators of in‐lake net ecosystem productivity, virtually no relationship exists between dissolved organic carbon and p CO 2,aq . Modeling suggests that hydrologic dissolved inorganic carbon supports p CO 2,aq in most supersaturated systems (to the extent that 12% of supersaturated systems simultaneously exhibit positive net ecosystem productivity), and also supports primary production in most CO 2 ‐undersaturated systems. Dissolved inorganic carbon loading appears to be an important determinant of CO 2 concentrations and fluxes across the air‐water interface in the majority of lakes and reservoirs in the contiguous United States.

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