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Global CO2 emissions from dry inland waters share common drivers across ecosystems
- Publication Year :
- 2020
-
Abstract
- [EN] Many inland waters exhibit complete or partial desiccation, or have vanished due to global change, exposing sediments to the atmosphere. Yet, data on carbon dioxide (CO2) emissions from these sediments are too scarce to upscale emissions for global estimates or to understand their fundamental drivers. Here, we present the results of a global survey covering 196 dry inland waters across diverse ecosystem types and climate zones. We show that their CO2 emissions share fundamental drivers and constitute a substantial fraction of the carbon cycled by inland waters. CO2 emissions were consistent across ecosystem types and climate zones, with local characteristics explaining much of the variability. Accounting for such emissions increases global estimates of carbon emissions from inland waters by 6% (~0.12 Pg C y−1). Our results indicate that emissions from dry inland waters represent a significant and likely increasing component of the inland waters carbon cycle.
Details
- Database :
- OAIster
- Notes :
- This study was made possible thanks to a large collective effort of a global research network called dryflux (www.ufz.de/dryflux). We would like to thank numerous helpers for their assistance during field work. This research was inspired by GLEON (Global Lake Ecological Observatory Network). This work was supported by the German Research Foundation (DFG, KO1911/6-1 and GR1540/23-1) to P.S.K. and H.P.G., the Spanish Ministry of Science, Innovation and Universities (C-HYDROCHANGE, CGL2017-86788-C3-3-P and CGL2017-86788-C3-2-P) to B.O. and R.M., the Spanish Government (CGL2016-77487-R), the Basque Government (IT951-16), the BBVA Foundation (06417) to D.vS. and A.E., the European Research Council (FP7/2007-2013, ERC grant agreement 336642) to A.L. and R.F.M., CNPq (310033/2017-9) to A.M.A., the Carlsberg Foundation (CF16-0325) to T.R. and A.P., the Nederlandse Organisatie voor Wetenschappelijk Onderzoek (NWO, Veni Grant 86312012) to S.K., the Estonian Ministry of Education and Research (IUT 21-02) and the Estonian Research Council grant (PUT PSG32, PUT1598) to A.L. and E-I.R., the National Research Foundation of Korea (2017R1D1A1B06035179) to J-H.P., German Federal Ministry of Education and Research (BMBF) CLIENT programme (grant: 2WCL1337A) and German Academic Exchange Service (DAAD, grant 57218695) to M.A.F., the Seneca Foundation (20645/JLI/18) to M.M.S.M. and M.I.A. N.C. was supported by Beatriu de Pinós grant (2016-00215), A.P. by the Ramón Areces Foundation postgraduate studies programme, R.dC. by the University of Murcia (FPU R-269/2014), E.S.O.J. by the Erasmus+ Programme NON-EU 2017/2018, J.R.P. by the Coordenação de Aperfeiçoamento de Pessoal de Nível Superior (CAPES Finance Code 001). C.M-L. by the French Agency for Biodiversity (ONEMA-AFB, Action 13, ‘Colmatage, échange snappe-rivière et processus biogéochimiques’), R.M. by the project C-HydroChange, funded by the Spanish Agencia Estatal de Investigación (AEI) and Fondo Europeo de Desarrollo Regional (FEDER), English
- Publication Type :
- Electronic Resource
- Accession number :
- edsoai.on1202406388
- Document Type :
- Electronic Resource