Sources and delivery of carbon, nitrogen, and phosphorus to the coastal zone: An overview of Global Nutrient Export from Watersheds (NEWS) models and their application
Top Cited Papers
- 31 December 2005
- journal article
- Published by American Geophysical Union (AGU) in Global Biogeochemical Cycles
- Vol. 19 (4)
- https://doi.org/10.1029/2005gb002606
Abstract
An overview of the first spatially explicit, multielement (N, P, and C), multiform (dissolved inorganic: DIN, DIP; dissolved organic: DOC, DON, DOP; and particulate: POC, PN, PP) predictive model system of river nutrient export from watersheds (Global Nutrient Export from Watersheds (NEWS)) is presented. NEWS models estimate export from 5761 watersheds globally as a function of land use, nutrient inputs, hydrology, and other factors; regional and global scale patterns as of 1995 are presented here. Watershed sources and their relative magnitudes differ by element and form. For example, anthropogenic sources dominate the export of DIN and DIP at the global scale, although their anthropogenic sources differ significantly (diffuse and point, respectively). Natural sources dominate DON and DOP export globally, although diffuse anthropogenic sources dominate in several regions in Asia, Europe and N. America. “Hot spots” where yield (kg km−2 yr−1) is high for several elements and forms were identified, including parts of Indonesia, Japan, southern Asia, and Central America, due to anthropogenic N and P inputs in some regions and high water runoff in others. NEWS models provide a tool to examine past, current and future river export of nutrients, and how humans might impact element ratios and forms, and thereby affect estuaries and coastal seas.Keywords
This publication has 56 references indexed in Scilit:
- Global distribution and sources of dissolved inorganic nitrogen export to the coastal zone: Results from a spatially explicit, global modelGlobal Biogeochemical Cycles, 2005
- A comparison of global spatial distributions of nitrogen inputs for nonpoint sources and effects on river nitrogen exportGlobal Biogeochemical Cycles, 2005
- Nitrogen Cycles: Past, Present, and FutureBiogeochemistry, 2004
- Development and validation of a global database of lakes, reservoirs and wetlandsJournal of Hydrology, 2004
- Worldwide distribution of continental rock lithology: Implications for the atmospheric/soil CO2 uptake by continental weathering and alkalinity river transport to the oceansGlobal Biogeochemical Cycles, 2003
- Coastal typology development with heterogeneous data setsRegional Environmental Change, 2002
- High‐resolution fields of global runoff combining observed river discharge and simulated water balancesGlobal Biogeochemical Cycles, 2002
- Modelling the Transfer and Retention of Nutrients in the Drainage Network of the Danube RiverEstuarine, Coastal and Shelf Science, 2002
- Geomorphometric attributes of the global system of rivers at 30-minute spatial resolutionJournal of Hydrology, 2000
- Global system of rivers: Its role in organizing continental land mass and defining land‐to‐ocean linkagesGlobal Biogeochemical Cycles, 2000