air–water co2 evasion from us east coast estuaries
Clicks: 86
ID: 186148
2017
This study presents the first regional-scale assessment of estuarine CO2
evasion along the US East Coast (25–45° N). The focus is on 42
tidal estuaries, which together drain a catchment of 697 000 km2 or
76 % of the total area within this latitudinal band. The approach is
based on the Carbon–Generic Estuary Model (C-GEM) that allows the simulation
of hydrodynamics, transport, and biogeochemistry for a wide range of
estuarine systems using readily available geometric parameters and global
databases of seasonal climatic, hydraulic, and riverine biogeochemical
information. Our simulations, performed using conditions representative of
the year 2000, suggest that, together, US East Coast estuaries emit 1.9
Tg C yr−1 in the form of CO2, which corresponds to about 40 %
of the carbon inputs from rivers, marshes, and mangroves. Carbon removal
within estuaries results from a combination of physical (outgassing of
supersaturated riverine waters) and biogeochemical processes (net
heterotrophy and nitrification). The CO2 evasion and its underlying
drivers show important variations across individual systems, but reveal a
clear latitudinal pattern characterized by a decrease in the relative
importance of physical over biogeochemical processes along a north–south
gradient. Finally, the results reveal that the ratio of estuarine surface
area to the river discharge, S∕Q (which has a scale of per meter discharged
water per year), could be used as a predictor of the estuarine carbon
processing in future regional- and global-scale assessments.
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laruelle2017biogeosciencesairwater
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Authors | ;G. G. Laruelle;N. Goossens;S. Arndt;W.-J. Cai;P. Regnier |
Journal | tetrahedron letters |
Year | 2017 |
DOI | 10.5194/bg-14-2441-2017 |
URL | |
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