Increased Terrestrial Carbon Export and CO2 Evasion From Global Inland Waters Since the Preindustrial Era

Author:

Tian Hanqin12ORCID,Yao Yuanzhi23,Li Ya24,Shi Hao24,Pan Shufen25ORCID,Najjar Raymond G.6ORCID,Pan Naiqing12,Bian Zihao2ORCID,Ciais Philippe7ORCID,Cai Wei‐Jun8ORCID,Dai Minhan9ORCID,Friedrichs Marjorie A. M.10ORCID,Li Hong‐Yi11,Lohrenz Steven12ORCID,Leung L. Ruby13ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Schiller Institute for Integrated Science and Society, Department of Earth and Environmental Sciences Boston College MA Chestnut Hill USA

2. International Center for Climate and Global Change Research College of Forestry, Wildlife and Environment Auburn University Auburn AL USA

3. School of Geographic Sciences East China Normal University Shanghai China

4. Research Center for Eco‐Environmental Sciences Chinese Academy of Sciences Beijing China

5. Department of Engineering and Environmental Studies Program Boston College Chestnut Hill MA USA

6. Department of Meteorology and Atmospheric Science The Pennsylvania State University University Park PA USA

7. IPSL ‐ Laboratoire des Sciences du Climat et de l'Environnement Centre d'Etudes Orme des Merisiers Gif sur Yvette France

8. School of Marine Science and Policy University of Delaware Newark DE USA

9. State Key Laboratory of Marine Environmental Sciences College of Ocean and Earth Sciences Xiamen University Xiamen China

10. Virginia Institute of Marine Science William & Mary Gloucester Point VA USA

11. Department of Civil and Environmental Engineering University of Houston Houston TX USA

12. School for Marine Science and Technology University of Massachusetts Dartmouth New Bedford MA USA

13. Atmospheric Sciences and Global Change Division Pacific Northwest National Laboratory Richland WA USA

Abstract

AbstractGlobal carbon dioxide (CO2) evasion from inland waters (rivers, lakes, and reservoirs) and carbon (C) export from land to oceans constitute critical terms in the global C budget. However, the magnitudes, spatiotemporal patterns, and underlying mechanisms of these fluxes are poorly constrained. Here, we used a coupled terrestrial–aquatic model to assess how multiple changes in climate, land use, atmospheric CO2 concentration, nitrogen (N) deposition, N fertilizer and manure applications have affected global CO2 evasion and riverine C export along the terrestrial‐aquatic continuum. We estimate that terrestrial C loadings, riverine C export, and CO2 evasion in the preindustrial period (1800s) were 1,820 ± 507 (mean ± standard deviation), 765 ± 132, and 841 ± 190 Tg C yr−1, respectively. During 1800–2019, multifactorial global changes caused an increase of 25% (461 Tg C yr−1) in terrestrial C loadings, reaching 2,281 Tg C yr−1 in the 2010s, with 23% (104 Tg C yr−1) of this increase exported to the ocean and 59% (273 Tg C yr−1) being emitted to the atmosphere. Our results showed that global inland water recycles and exports nearly half of the net land C sink into the atmosphere and oceans, highlighting the important role of inland waters in the global C balance, an amount that should be taken into account in future C budgets. Our analysis supports the view that a major feature of the global C cycle–the transfer from land to ocean–has undergone a dramatic change over the last two centuries as a result of human activities.

Funder

National Aeronautics and Space Administration

National Science Foundation

National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration

Publisher

American Geophysical Union (AGU)

Subject

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

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