Long‐Term Changes in Concentration and Yield of Riverine Dissolved Silicon From the Poles to the Tropics

Author:

Jankowski Kathi Jo1ORCID,Johnson Keira2,Sethna Lienne3ORCID,Julian Paul4ORCID,Wymore Adam S.5ORCID,Shogren Arial J.6ORCID,Thomas Patrick K.7ORCID,Sullivan Pamela L.2ORCID,McKnight Diane M.8ORCID,McDowell William H.5ORCID,Heindel Ruth9ORCID,Jones Jeremy B.10ORCID,Wollheim Wilfred5ORCID,Abbott Benjamin11ORCID,Deegan Linda12,Carey Joanna C.13ORCID

Affiliation:

1. U.S. Geological Survey Upper Midwest Environmental Sciences Center La Crosse WI USA

2. College of Earth, Ocean, and Atmospheric Science Oregon State University Corvallis OR USA

3. St. Croix Watershed Research Station Marine on St. Croix MN USA

4. The Everglades Foundation Palmetto Bay FL USA

5. Department of Natural Resources and the Environment University of New Hampshire Durham NH USA

6. Department of Biological Sciences University of Alabama Tuscaloosa AL USA

7. Department of Aquatic Ecology Swiss Federal Institute of Aquatic Science and Technology (EAWAG) Dübendorf Switzerland

8. Department of Civil, Environmental, and Architectural Engineering University of Colorado Boulder Boulder CO USA

9. Environmental Studies Program Kenyon College Gambier OH USA

10. Institute of Arctic Biology Department of Biology and Wildlife University of Alaska Fairbanks Fairbanks AK USA

11. Plant & Wildlife Sciences Brigham Young University Provo UT USA

12. Woodwell Climate Research Center Falmouth MA USA

13. Mathematics, Analytics, Science, and Technology Division Babson College Wellesley MA USA

Abstract

AbstractRiverine exports of silicon (Si) influence global carbon cycling through the growth of marine diatoms, which account for ∼25% of global primary production. Climate change will likely alter river Si exports in biome‐specific ways due to interacting shifts in chemical weathering rates, hydrologic connectivity, and metabolic processes in aquatic and terrestrial systems. Nonetheless, factors driving long‐term changes in Si exports remain unexplored at local, regional, and global scales. We evaluated how concentrations and yields of dissolved Si (DSi) changed over the last several decades of rapid climate warming using long‐term data sets from 60 rivers and streams spanning the globe (e.g., Antarctic, tropical, temperate, boreal, alpine, Arctic systems). We show that widespread changes in river DSi concentration and yield have occurred, with the most substantial shifts occurring in alpine and polar regions. The magnitude and direction of trends varied within and among biomes, were most strongly associated with differences in land cover, and were often independent of changes in river discharge. These findings indicate that there are likely diverse mechanisms driving change in river Si biogeochemistry that span the land‐water interface, which may include glacial melt, changes in terrestrial vegetation, and river productivity. Finally, trends were often stronger in months outside of the growing season, particularly in temperate and boreal systems, demonstrating a potentially important role of shifting seasonality for the flux of Si from rivers. Our results have implications for the timing and magnitude of silica processing in rivers and its delivery to global oceans.

Funder

National Science Foundation

Publisher

American Geophysical Union (AGU)

Subject

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

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