Fires prime terrestrial organic carbon for riverine export to the global oceans

被引:0
|
作者
Matthew W. Jones
Alysha I. Coppola
Cristina Santín
Thorsten Dittmar
Rudolf Jaffé
Stefan H. Doerr
Timothy A. Quine
机构
[1] University of East Anglia,Tyndall Centre for Climate Change Research, School of Environmental Sciences
[2] University of Zurich,Department of Geography
[3] Department of Earth Sciences,Geological Institute
[4] ETH Zürich,Geography Department, College of Science
[5] Sonneggstrasse 5,Biosciences Department, College of Science
[6] 8092,Research Group for Marine Geochemistry (ICBM
[7] Swansea University,MPI Bridging Group), Institute for Chemistry and Biology of the Marine Environment (ICBM)
[8] Swansea University,Helmholtz Institute for Functional Marine Biodiversity (HIFMB)
[9] University of Oldenburg,Southeast Environmental Research Center and Department of Chemistry and Biochemistry
[10] University of Oldenburg,Geography Department, College of Life and Environmental Science
[11] Florida International University,undefined
[12] University of Exeter,undefined
来源
关键词
D O I
暂无
中图分类号
学科分类号
摘要
Black carbon (BC) is a recalcitrant form of organic carbon (OC) produced by landscape fires. BC is an important component of the global carbon cycle because, compared to unburned biogenic OC, it is selectively conserved in terrestrial and oceanic pools. Here we show that the dissolved BC (DBC) content of dissolved OC (DOC) is twice greater in major (sub)tropical and high-latitude rivers than in major temperate rivers, with further significant differences between biomes. We estimate that rivers export 18 ± 4 Tg DBC year−1 globally and that, including particulate BC fluxes, total riverine export amounts to 43 ± 15 Tg BC year−1 (12 ± 5% of the OC flux). While rivers export ~1% of the OC sequestered by terrestrial vegetation, our estimates suggest that 34 ± 26% of the BC produced by landscape fires has an oceanic fate. Biogeochemical models require modification to account for the unique dynamics of BC and to predict the response of recalcitrant OC export to changing environmental conditions.
引用
收藏
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [21] Riverine export and the effects of circulation on dissolved organic carbon in the Hudson Bay system, Canada
    Mundy, C. J.
    Gosselin, Michel
    Starr, Michel
    Michel, Christine
    LIMNOLOGY AND OCEANOGRAPHY, 2010, 55 (01) : 315 - 323
  • [22] Modelling the role of fires in the terrestrial carbon balance by incorporating SPITFIRE into the global vegetation model ORCHIDEE - Part 2: Carbon emissions and the role of fires in the global carbon balance
    Yue, C.
    Ciais, P.
    Cadule, P.
    Thonicke, K.
    van Leeuwen, T. T.
    GEOSCIENTIFIC MODEL DEVELOPMENT, 2015, 8 (05) : 1321 - 1338
  • [23] Linking terrestrial phosphorus inputs to riverine export across the United States
    Metson, Genevieve S.
    Lin, Jiajia
    Harrison, John A.
    Compton, Jana E.
    WATER RESEARCH, 2017, 124 : 177 - 191
  • [24] The nature, timescale, and efficiency of riverine export of terrestrial organic carbon in the (sub)tropics: Insights at the molecular level from the Pearl River and adjacent coastal sea
    Wei, Bingbing
    Mollenhauer, Gesine
    Hefter, Jens
    Kusch, Stephanie
    Grotheer, Hendrik
    Schefuss, Enno
    Jia, Guodong
    EARTH AND PLANETARY SCIENCE LETTERS, 2021, 565
  • [25] Plastics Are an Insignificant Carrier of Riverine Organic Pollutants to the Coastal Oceans
    Mai, Lei
    He, Hui
    Bao, Lian-Jun
    Liu, Liang-Ying
    Zeng, Eddy Y.
    ENVIRONMENTAL SCIENCE & TECHNOLOGY, 2020, 54 (24) : 15852 - 15860
  • [26] Anthropogenic influences on riverine fluxes of dissolved inorganic carbon to the oceans
    Raymond, Peter A.
    Hamilton, Stephen K.
    LIMNOLOGY AND OCEANOGRAPHY LETTERS, 2018, 3 (03) : 143 - 155
  • [27] An Analysis of Terrestrial and Aquatic Environmental Controls of Riverine Dissolved Organic Carbon in the Conterminous United States
    Yang, Qichun
    Zhang, Xuesong
    Xu, Xingya
    Asrar, Ghassem R.
    WATER, 2017, 9 (06)
  • [28] Environmental Controls on the Riverine Export of Dissolved Black Carbon
    Jones, Matthew W.
    de Aragao, Luiz E. O. C.
    Dittmar, Thorsten
    de Rezende, Carlos E.
    Almeida, Marcelo G.
    Johnson, Ben T.
    Marques, Jomar S. J.
    Niggemann, Jutta
    Rangel, Thiago P.
    Quine, Timothy A.
    GLOBAL BIOGEOCHEMICAL CYCLES, 2019, 33 (07) : 849 - 874
  • [29] Biogeochemical drivers of the fate of riverine mercury discharged to the global and Arctic oceans
    Zhang, Yanxu
    Jacob, Daniel J.
    Dutkiewicz, Stephanie
    Amos, Helen M.
    Long, Michael S.
    Sunderland, Elsie M.
    GLOBAL BIOGEOCHEMICAL CYCLES, 2015, 29 (06) : 854 - 864
  • [30] The isotopic signature of the global riverine molybdenum flux and anoxia in the ancient oceans
    C. Archer
    D. Vance
    Nature Geoscience, 2008, 1 : 597 - 600