Increasing riverine export of dissolved organic carbon from China

Author:

Yan Yanzi1ORCID,Lauerwald Ronny23,Wang Xuhui1ORCID,Regnier Pierre3,Ciais Philippe4,Ran Lishan5ORCID,Gao Yuanyi1ORCID,Huang Ling1,Zhang Yao1ORCID,Duan Zheng6,Papa Fabrice78ORCID,Yu Bing1ORCID,Piao Shilong19ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Institute of Carbon Neutrality, Sino‐French Institute for Earth System Science, College of Urban and Environmental Sciences, Peking University Beijing China

2. Université Paris‐Saclay, INRAE, AgroParisTech, UMR ECOSYS Thiverval‐Grignon France

3. Department Geoscience, Environment & Society‐BGEOSYS Université Libre de Bruxelles Bruxelles Belgium

4. Laboratoire des Sciences du Climat et de l'Environnement IPSL‐LSCE CEA/CNRS/UVSQ, Orme des Merisiers Gif sur Yvette France

5. Department of Geography The University of Hong Kong Hong Kong China

6. Department of Physical Geography and Ecosystem Science Lund University Lund Sweden

7. University of Toulouse, LEGOS (IRD/CNES/CNRS/UPS) Toulouse France

8. Universidade de Brasília (UnB), IRD, Instituto de Geociências Brasília Brazil

9. Key Laboratory of Alpine Ecology and Biodiversity Institute of Tibetan Plateau Research, Chinese Academy of Sciences Beijing China

Abstract

AbstractRiver transport of dissolved organic carbon (DOC) to the ocean is a crucial but poorly quantified regional carbon cycle component. Large uncertainties remaining on the riverine DOC export from China, as well as its trend and drivers of change, have challenged the reconciliation between atmosphere‐based and land‐based estimates of China's land carbon sink. Here, we harmonized a large database of riverine in‐situ measurements and applied a random forest model, to quantify riverine DOC fluxes (FDOC) and DOC concentrations (CDOC) in rivers across China. This study proposes the first DOC modeling effort capable of reproducing well the magnitude of riverine CDOC and FDOC, as well as its trends, on a monthly scale and with a much wider spatial distribution over China compared to previous studies that mainly focused on annual‐scale estimates and large rivers. Results show that over the period 2001–2015, the average CDOC was 2.25 ± 0.45 mg/L and average FDOC was 4.04 ± 1.02 Tg/year. Simultaneously, we found a significant increase in FDOC (+0.044 Tg/year2, p = .01), but little change in CDOC (−0.001 mg/L/year, p > .10). Although the trend in CDOC is not significant at the country scale, it is significantly increasing in the Yangtze River Basin and Huaihe River Basin (0.005 and 0.013 mg/L/year, p < .05) while significantly decreasing in the Yellow River Basin and Southwest Rivers Basin (−0.043 and −0.014 mg/L/year, p = .01). Changes in hydrology, play a stronger role than direct impacts of anthropogenic activities in determining the spatio‐temporal variability of FDOC and CDOC across China. However, and in contrast with other basins, the significant increase in CDOC in the Yangtze River Basin and Huaihe River Basin is attributable to direct anthropogenic activities. Given the dominance of hydrology in driving FDOC, the increase in FDOC is likely to continue under the projected increase in river discharge over China resulting from a future wetter climate.

Funder

National Natural Science Foundation of China

Publisher

Wiley

Subject

General Environmental Science,Ecology,Environmental Chemistry,Global and Planetary Change

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