Climate change increases riverine carbon outgassing, while export to the ocean remains uncertain

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Abstract

Any regular interaction of land and river during flooding affects carbon pools within the terrestrial system, riverine carbon and carbon exported from the system. In the Amazon basin carbon fluxes are considerably influenced by annual flooding, during which terrigenous organic material is imported to the river. The Amazon basin therefore represents an excellent example of a tightly coupled terrestrial-riverine system. The processes of generation, conversion and transport of organic carbon in such a coupled terrigenous-riverine system strongly interact and are climate-sensitive, yet their functioning is rarely considered in Earth system models and their response to climate change is still largely unknown. To quantify regional and global carbon budgets and climate change effects on carbon pools and carbon fluxes, it is important to account for the coupling between the land, the river, the ocean and the atmosphere. We developed the RIVerine Carbon Model (RivCM), which is directly coupled to the well-established dynamic vegetation and hydrology model LPJmL, in order to account for this large-scale coupling. We evaluate RivCM with observational data and show that some of the values are reproduced quite well by the model, while we see large deviations for other variables. This is mainly caused by some simplifications we assumed. Our evaluation shows that it is possible to reproduce large-scale carbon transport across a river system but that this involves large uncertainties. Acknowledging these uncertainties, we estimate the potential changes in riverine carbon by applying RivCM for climate forcing from five climate models and three CO2 emission scenarios (Special Report on Emissions Scenarios, SRES). We find that climate change causes a doubling of riverine organic carbon in the southern and western basin while reducing it by 20ĝ€-% in the eastern and northern parts. In contrast, the amount of riverine inorganic carbon shows a 2-to 3-fold increase in the entire basin, independent of the SRES scenario. The export of carbon to the atmosphere increases as well, with an average of about 30-. In contrast, changes in future export of organic carbon to the Atlantic Ocean depend on the SRES scenario and are projected to either decrease by about 8.9-% (SRES A1B) or increase by about 9.1-% (SRES A2). Such changes in the terrigenous-riverine system could have local and regional impacts on the carbon budget of the whole Amazon basin and parts of the Atlantic Ocean. Changes in riverine carbon could lead to a shift in the riverine nutrient supply and pH, while changes in the exported carbon to the ocean lead to changes in the supply of organic material that acts as a food source in the Atlantic. On larger scales the increased outgassing of CO2 could turn the Amazon basin from a sink of carbon to a considerable source. Therefore, we propose that the coupling of terrestrial and riverine carbon budgets should be included in subsequent analysis of the future regional carbon budget.

Figures

  • Figure 1. Overview of the transfer of data between the models and scenarios.
  • Figure 2. Input and flow chart of RivCM. The four spatial components “LAND”, “RIVER”, “ATMOSPHERE” and “OCEAN” are connected by the exchange of carbon between different carbon pools (ovals). The carbon pools are transformed through the most relevant processes (diamonds) with specific rates and ratios (rectangles). After the initialization of the input, calculations are conducted on a monthly basis. Litc: carbon in litter; Soilc: carbon in soil; POC: particulate organic carbon; DOC: dissolved organic carbon; IC: inorganic carbon.
  • Table 1. Overview of the input used in the model.
  • Table 2. List of physical constants.
  • Figure 3. River type (a) and river order (b). Cells of river order 1 (headwater) have a mean annual discharge of less than 8× 103 m3 yr−1; cells of river order 2 have a discharge between 8× 103 and 2× 105 m3 yr−1; cells of river order 3 have a discharge higher than 2× 105 m3 yr−1.
  • Table 3. List of parameters.
  • Table 4. List of data used for calibration and validation.
  • Table 5. Location and characteristics of the three subregions.

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CITATION STYLE

APA

Langerwisch, F., Walz, A., Rammig, A., Tietjen, B., Thonicke, K., & Cramer, W. (2016). Climate change increases riverine carbon outgassing, while export to the ocean remains uncertain. Earth System Dynamics, 7(3), 559–582. https://doi.org/10.5194/esd-7-559-2016

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