4.8 Article

Global carbon dioxide efflux from rivers enhanced by high nocturnal emissions

Journal

NATURE GEOSCIENCE
Volume 14, Issue 5, Pages 289-+

Publisher

NATURE PORTFOLIO
DOI: 10.1038/s41561-021-00722-3

Keywords

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Funding

  1. Formas grant - National Science Foundation Macrosystems program (NSF) [EF-1442439]
  2. National Science Foundation [EAR-1847331]

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The amount of CO2 emitted into the atmosphere from rivers is estimated to be four times higher than the total carbon flux to the oceans, with nocturnal emissions being 27% higher on average. This nocturnal increase is primarily attributed to daytime photosynthesis fixing CO2. Current estimates are significantly underestimated due to reliance on daytime measurements, and not accounting for the difference in emissions between day and night can lead to a further underestimation.
Carbon dioxide (CO2) emissions to the atmosphere from running waters are estimated to be four times greater than the total carbon (C) flux to the oceans. However, these fluxes remain poorly constrained because of substantial spatial and temporal variability in dissolved CO2 concentrations. Using a global compilation of high-frequency CO2 measurements, we demonstrate that nocturnal CO2 emissions are on average 27% (0.9 gC m(-2) d(-1)) greater than those estimated from diurnal concentrations alone. Constraints on light availability due to canopy shading or water colour are the principal controls on observed diel (24 hour) variation, suggesting this nocturnal increase arises from daytime fixation of CO2 by photosynthesis. Because current global estimates of CO2 emissions to the atmosphere from running waters (0.65-1.8 PgC yr(-1)) rely primarily on discrete measurements of dissolved CO2 obtained during the day, they substantially underestimate the magnitude of this flux. Accounting for night-time CO2 emissions may elevate global estimates from running waters to the atmosphere by 0.20-0.55 PgC yr(-1). Failing to account for emission differences between day and night will lead to an underestimate of global CO2 emissions from rivers by up to 0.55 PgC yr(-1), according to analyses of high-frequency CO2 measurements.

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