Abstract

AbstractTrends in surface water dissolved organic carbon (DOC) concentrations have received considerable scientific interest during recent decades. However, intra‐annual DOC variability is often orders of magnitude larger than long‐term trends. Unraveling the controls on intra‐annual DOC dynamics holds the key to a better understanding of long‐term changes and their ecological significance. We quantified and characterized intra‐annual DOC variability and compared it with long‐term DOC trends in 136 streams and rivers, varying in size and geographical characteristics, across a 1400 km latitudinal gradient during 2000–2010. Discharge, temperature, and month of the year were the most significant predictors of intra‐annual DOC variability in a majority of the running waters. Relationships between DOC, discharge, and temperature were, however, different along a mean annual temperature (MAT) gradient. Running waters with low MAT generally displayed positive DOC‐discharge correlations whereas the relationships in sites with higher MAT were more variable. This reflected contrasting relationships between temperature and discharge with discharge positively correlated with temperature in cold areas, while it was negatively correlated with temperature in catchments with higher MAT. Sites where flow, temperature, and month were poorly related to intra‐annual DOC dynamics were large catchments or sites with extensive upstream lake cover. DOC trends were generally much smaller than intra‐annual DOC variability and did not show any north‐south gradient. Our findings suggest that DOC in running waters could respond to a changing climate in ways not predictable, or even discernible, from extrapolation of recent interannual trends.

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