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Plumbing the Global Carbon Cycle: Integrating Inland Waters into the Terrestrial Carbon Budget
Authors:J J Cole  Y T Prairie  N F Caraco  W H McDowell  L J Tranvik  R G Striegl  C M Duarte  P Kortelainen  J A Downing  J J Middelburg  J Melack
Institution:(1) Institute of Ecosystem Studies, Box AB, Millbrook, NY 12545, USA;(2) Département des Sciences biologiques, Université du Québec à Montréal, Station Centre-Ville, P.O. Box 8888, Montreal, H3C 3P8, Canada;(3) Department of Natural Resources, University of New Hampshire, Durham, NH 03824, USA;(4) Limnology, Department of Ecology and Evolution, Evolutionary Biology Centre, Uppsala University, Norbyv. 20, 75 236 Uppsala, Sweden;(5) United States Geological Survey, National Research Program, MS 413, Box 25046, Denver, CO 80225, USA;(6) IMEDEA (CSIC-UIB), Miquel Marques 21, Esporles Islas Baleares, Spain;(7) Finnish Environment Institute, P.O. Box 140, 00251 Helsinki, Finland;(8) Department of Ecology, Evolution and Organismal Biology, Iowa State University, 253 Bessy Hall, Ames, Iowa 50011-1020, USA;(9) Netherlands Institute of Ecology, Center for Estuarine and Marine Ecology, Korringaweg 7, 4401, NT, Yerseke, The Netherlands;(10) Donald Bren School of Environmental Science & Management, University of California, Santa Barbara, CA 93106-5131, USA
Abstract:ABSTRACT Because freshwater covers such a small fraction of the Earth’s surface area, inland freshwater ecosystems (particularly lakes, rivers, and reservoirs) have rarely been considered as potentially important quantitative components of the carbon cycle at either global or regional scales. By taking published estimates of gas exchange, sediment accumulation, and carbon transport for a variety of aquatic systems, we have constructed a budget for the role of inland water ecosystems in the global carbon cycle. Our analysis conservatively estimates that inland waters annually receive, from a combination of background and anthropogenically altered sources, on the order of 1.9 Pg C y−1 from the terrestrial landscape, of which about 0.2 is buried in aquatic sediments, at least 0.8 (possibly much more) is returned to the atmosphere as gas exchange while the remaining 0.9 Pg y−1 is delivered to the oceans, roughly equally as inorganic and organic carbon. Thus, roughly twice as much C enters inland aquatic systems from land as is exported from land to the sea. Over prolonged time net carbon fluxes in aquatic systems tend to be greater per unit area than in much of the surrounding land. Although their area is small, these freshwater aquatic systems can affect regional C balances. Further, the inclusion of inland, freshwater ecosystems provides useful insight about the storage, oxidation and transport of terrestrial C, and may warrant a revision of how the modern net C sink on land is described.
Keywords:global carbon  freshwater-ecosystems  inland-waters  
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