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High rates of daytime river metabolism are an underestimated component of carbon cycling

Environmental Studies and Forestry

High rates of daytime river metabolism are an underestimated component of carbon cycling

F. Tromboni, E. R. Hotchkiss, et al.

This study reveals that river ecosystem respiration rates are faster than previously thought, based on innovative measurements using stable oxygen isotope signatures. Conducted by Flavia Tromboni and colleagues, the research highlights significant differences in metabolism estimations in rivers across diverse biomes.... show more
Abstract
River metabolism and, thus, carbon cycling are governed by gross primary production and ecosystem respiration. Traditionally river metabolism is derived from diel dissolved oxygen concentrations, which cannot resolve diel changes in ecosystem respiration. Here, we compare river metabolism derived from oxygen concentrations with estimates from stable oxygen isotope signatures (δ¹⁸O₂) from 14 sites in rivers across three biomes using Bayesian inverse modeling. We find isotopically derived ecosystem respiration was greater in the day than night for all rivers (maximum change of 113 g O₂ m⁻² d⁻¹, minimum of 1 g O₂ m⁻² d⁻¹). Temperature (20 °C) normalized rates of ecosystem respiration and gross primary production were 1.1 to 87 and 1.5 to 22-fold higher when derived from oxygen isotope data compared to concentration data. Through accounting for diel variation in ecosystem respiration, our isotopically-derived rates suggest that ecosystem respiration and microbial carbon cycling in rivers is more rapid than predicted by traditional methods.
Publisher
Communications Earth & Environment
Published On
Nov 07, 2022
Authors
Flavia Tromboni, Erin R. Hotchkiss, Anne E. Schechner, Walter K. Dodds, Simon R. Poulson, Sudeep Chandra
Tags
river metabolism
carbon cycling
dissolved oxygen
ecosystem respiration
stable oxygen isotopes
gross primary production
biomes
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