Dissolved organic carbon trends resulting from changes in atmospheric deposition chemistry
Top Cited Papers
- 1 November 2007
- journal article
- review article
- Published by Springer Nature in Nature
- Vol. 450 (7169) , 537-540
- https://doi.org/10.1038/nature06316
Abstract
Several hypotheses have been proposed to explain recent, widespread increases in concentrations of dissolved organic carbon (DOC) in the surface waters of glaciated landscapes across eastern North America and northern and central Europe. Some invoke anthropogenic forcing through mechanisms related to climate change, nitrogen deposition or changes in land use, and by implication suggest that current concentrations and fluxes are without precedent. All of these hypotheses imply that DOC levels will continue to rise, with unpredictable consequences for the global carbon cycle. Alternatively, it has been proposed that DOC concentrations are returning toward pre-industrial levels as a result of a gradual decline in the sulphate content of atmospheric deposition. Here we show, through the assessment of time series data from 522 remote lakes and streams in North America and northern Europe, that rising trends in DOC between 1990 and 2004 can be concisely explained by a simple model based solely on changes in deposition chemistry and catchment acid-sensitivity. We demonstrate that DOC concentrations have increased in proportion to the rates at which atmospherically deposited anthropogenic sulphur and sea salt have declined. We conclude that acid deposition to these ecosystems has been partially buffered by changes in organic acidity and that the rise in DOC is integral to recovery from acidification. Over recent decades, deposition-driven increases in organic matter solubility may have increased the export of DOC to the oceans, a potentially important component of regional carbon balances. The increase in DOC concentrations in these regions appears unrelated to other climatic factors.Keywords
This publication has 27 references indexed in Scilit:
- Browning the watersNature, 2006
- Alternative explanations for rising dissolved organic carbon export from organic soilsGlobal Change Biology, 2006
- Increasing trends of total organic carbon concentrations in small forest lakes in Finland from 1987 to 2003Science of The Total Environment, 2006
- Regional scale evidence for improvements in surface water chemistry 1990–2001Environmental Pollution, 2005
- Increased carbon transport in the Hudson River: unexpected consequence of nitrogen deposition?Frontiers in Ecology and the Environment, 2005
- Export of dissolved organic carbon from peatlands under elevated carbon dioxide levelsNature, 2004
- The European Carbon Budget: A GapScience, 2003
- Long term records of riverine dissolved organic matterBiogeochemistry, 2003
- Export of organic carbon from peat soilsNature, 2001
- Effects of burning and grazing on carbon sequestration in a Pennine blanket bog, UKThe Holocene, 2000