Abstract

Dissolved organic carbon (DOC) dynamics are critical to carbon cycling in forest ecosystems and sensitive to global change. Our study, spanning from 2001 to 2020 in a headwater catchment in subtropical China, analyzed DOC and water chemistry of throughfall, litter leachate, soil waters at various depths, and streamwater. We focused on DOC transport through hydrological pathways and assessed the long-term trends in DOC dynamics amidst environmental and climatic changes. Our results showed that the annual DOC deposition via throughfall and stream outflow was 14.2 ± 2.2 and 1.87 ± 0.83 g C m-2 year-1, respectively. Notably, there was a long-term declining trend in DOC deposition via throughfall (-0.195 mg C L-1 year-1), attributed to reduced organic carbon emissions from clean air actions. Conversely, DOC concentrations in soil waters and stream waters showed increasing trends, primarily due to mitigated acid deposition. Moreover, elevated temperature and precipitation could partly explain the long-term rise in DOC leaching. These trends in DOC dynamics have significant implications for the stability of carbon sink in terrestrial, aquatic, and even oceanic ecosystems at regional scales.

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