A worldwide view of organic carbon export from catchments

M Alvarez-Cobelas, DG Angeler, S Sánchez-Carrillo… - Biogeochemistry, 2012 - Springer
M Alvarez-Cobelas, DG Angeler, S Sánchez-Carrillo, G Almendros
Biogeochemistry, 2012Springer
Growing interest in the effects of global change on the metabolism, stoichiometry and cycling
of carbon in aquatic ecosystems has motivated research on the export of organic carbon
(OCE) from catchments. In this article, quantitative and functional features of the annual
export rates of total, particulate and dissolved organic carbon (TOC, POC and DOC) were
reviewed, and the stoichiometry of export (OC: N, OC: P and N: P) from 550 catchments
worldwide was reported. TOC export ranged 2.1–92,474 kg C km− 2 year− 1, POC export …
Abstract
Growing interest in the effects of global change on the metabolism, stoichiometry and cycling of carbon in aquatic ecosystems has motivated research on the export of organic carbon (OCE) from catchments. In this article, quantitative and functional features of the annual export rates of total, particulate and dissolved organic carbon (TOC, POC and DOC) were reviewed, and the stoichiometry of export (OC:N, OC:P and N:P) from 550 catchments worldwide was reported. TOC export ranged 2.1–92,474 kg C km−2 year−1, POC export ranged 0.4–73,979 kg C km−2 year−1 and DOC export ranged 1.2–56,946 kg C km−2 year−1. Exports of TOC and DOC were strongly linked, but POC export was unrelated to DOC. The DOC fraction comprised on average 73 ± 21% of TOC export. The export rates of organic carbon were poorly related to those of total nitrogen and total phosphorus. Discrete and continuous environmental variables failed to predict TOC export, but DOC export was influenced by discharge and catchment area worldwide. Models of OCE in different catchment types were controlled by different environmental variables; hydrological variables were generally better predictors of OCE than anthropogenic and soil variables. Elemental ratios of carbon export in most catchments were above the Redfield ratio, suggesting that phosphorus may become the limiting nutrient for downstream plant growth. These ratios were marginally related to environmental data. More detailed hydrological data, consideration of in-stream processes and the use of quasi-empirical dynamical models are advocated to improve our knowledge of OCE rates and those of other nutrients.
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