Abstract

Dissolved organic carbon (DOC) released from glaciers has an important role in the biogeochemistry of glacial ecosystems. This study focuses on DOC from glaciers of the southeastern Tibetan Plateau, where glaciers are experiencing rapid shrinkage. We found that concentrations of DOC in snowpits (0.16±0.054 μg g−1), aged snow (0.16±0.048 μg g−1), and bare ice (0.18±0.082 μg g−1) were similar across the southeastern Tibetan Plateau, but were slightly lower than those in other glaciers on the Tibetan Plateau. Vertical variations of DOC, particulate organic carbon, black carbon, and total nitrate in snowpit showed no systematic variations in the studied glaciers, with high values of DOC occurring in the ice or dusty layers. We estimated the export of DOC and particulate organic carbon from glaciers to be 1.96±0.66 Gg yr–1 and 5.88±2.15 Gg yr–1 in this region, respectively, indicating that organic carbon released from glacier meltwater may be affecting downstream ecosystems. Potential sources of the air masses arriving at the southeastern Tibetan glaciers include South Asia, Central Asia, Middle East, and northwest China. Emissions from biomass burning of South Asia played an important role in the deposition of DOC to the glacier, which can be evidenced by backward trajectories and fire spot distributions from MODIS and CALIPSO images. Our findings suggest that anthropogenic aerosols contribute abundant DOC to glaciers on the southeastern Tibetan Plateau. The pronounced rate of glacial melting in the region may be delivering increased quantities of relic DOC to downstream rivers.

Highlights

  • Glaciers cover a significant portion of the Earth’s surface and form an integral part of the global climate system [1,2,3]

  • We found no systematic variations for Dissolved organic carbon (DOC) and total nitrate (TN) with snow pit depth in the studied glaciers, but particulate organic carbon (POC) and black carbon (BC) showed consistent variations (Fig 4)

  • We find that DOC concentrations in glaciers of southeastern Tibetan Plateau are slightly lower than other results from the Tibetan Plateau, but comparable to those in the Alps and Alaska

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Summary

Introduction

Glaciers cover a significant portion of the Earth’s surface and form an integral part of the global climate system [1,2,3]. Because of the various inorganic and organic compounds deposited on them and the physical and photochemical processes that occur within them, glaciers.

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