Work by a University of Wyoming professor and a recent UW Ph.D.
graduate has provided a more complete picture of the role of rivers and
streams in the global carbon cycle.
Robert Hall Jr., professor in
UW’s Department of Zoology and Physiology, and former UW Program in
Ecology Ph.D. student Erin Hotchkiss, now at the University of Quebec in
Montreal, joined colleagues from Sweden’s Umea University, the Swedish
University of Agricultural Sciences and the University of Washington to
analyze the emission of carbon dioxide from running waters in the United
States. Their findings are published in a scientific paper, “Sources of
and processes controlling CO2 emissions change with the size of streams
and rivers,” in the journal
Nature Geoscience.
CO2
from streams and rivers constitutes a small percentage of overall
emissions of CO2 into Earth’s atmosphere, but it’s important to properly
quantify that contribution, the researchers say. “Without considering
the diverse controls on carbon dynamics in integrated land-water
budgets, we cannot anticipate how these dynamics will respond to future
environmental change,” they wrote.
CO2 emitted by rivers and
streams comes from two basic sources: from CO2 in soils adjacent to the
waters, and from respiration of CO2 by organisms in the waters
themselves. By analyzing existing data from streams and rivers across
the U.S., and using mathematical modeling, the scientists found that the
latter source of CO2 may be larger than has been thought.
“Running
waters are not just passive conduits of water and terrestrial carbon,
but also function as reactors that generate and release carbon dioxide
during its transport downstream,” says Hotchkiss, who led the analysis
while working as a postdoctoral researcher at Umea University.
The
scientists demonstrated that while most CO2 emitted from small streams
is derived from surrounding soils, in-stream respiration becomes a
larger proportion of CO2 emissions as rivers become larger.
Understanding
the mechanisms behind the production of CO2 in running water is
essential because it increases the ability to predict how changes in
land use and a warming climate could affect the sources and global
concentrations of greenhouse gases in the atmosphere.
“It is very
important to know the source of carbon dioxide in streams and rivers, as
well as the processes controlling respiration and emissions, if we are
to understand what happens when the environment changes,” Hotchkiss
says.
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