Abstract

Increases of riverine organic carbon concentrations have been observed across the northern hemisphere over the past few decades. These increases are the result of multiple environmental drivers, but the relative importance of the drivers is still unclear. We analyzed a dataset of >10 000 observations of riverine total organic carbon (TOC) concentrations and associated water chemistry and hydrological observations from 1993 to 2017. The observations span a ∼600 km north–south gradient from 30 individual river systems in Finland. Our data show significantly increasing TOC concentrations in 25 out of 30 systems, with an average increase from 12.0 to 15.1 mg l−1. The observed increase in riverine TOC concentrations led to an increase of 0.28 Mt in annual TOC load to the Baltic Sea from 1993 level to 2017 level. We analyzed the role of three putative environmental drivers of the observed TOC trends. Multiple regression analysis revealed that the most common driver was discharge, which alone explained TOC increases in 13 rivers, whereas pH and temperature were less important drivers (sole predictor in one and zero rivers, respectively). Different permutations of these three drivers were also found to be significant; the combination of discharge and pH being the most common (4 rivers). Land use was not in general linked with trends in TOC, except for the proportion of ditched land in the catchment, which was significantly correlated with increases in TOC concentration. Land use showed significant relationships with trends in discharge and pH. We also found that catchment characteristics are regulating the extent of these regional or global environmental changes causing the upward trends of riverine organic carbon.

Highlights

  • Climate change and land use change are profoundly affecting the global carbon cycle and causing drastic shifts in functioning of ecosystems worldwide (Regnier et al 2013)

  • Land use was not in general linked with trends in total organic carbon (TOC), except for the proportion of ditched land in the catchment, which was significantly correlated with increases in TOC concentration

  • We found that catchment characteristics are regulating the extent of these regional or global environmental changes causing the upward trends of riverine organic carbon

Read more

Summary

Introduction

Climate change and land use change are profoundly affecting the global carbon cycle and causing drastic shifts in functioning of ecosystems worldwide (Regnier et al 2013). Boreal systems are expected to be strongly influenced, as projected increases in temperatures are high in these areas. Precipitation is expected to increase in boreal areas, enhancing freshwater transport from catchments to the coastal sea. As rivers are important conduits linking terrestrial and oceanic ecosystems by transporting soil organic carbon from land to sea, changes in hydrology or water chemistry will have an effect on the coastal environment as well. The observed increases in riverine fluxes of OC contribute to coastal eutrophication, potentially exacerbating its adverse effects on coastal ecosystems, such as hypoxia (Conley et al 2011) and loss of biodiversity (Villnäs and Norkko 2011). Increased OC concentrations are indicative of the potential loss of soil organic carbon to aquatic systems (Tranvik and Jansson 2002)

Objectives
Methods
Results
Conclusion
Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call