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Substantial increase of organic carbon storage in Chinese lakes

Environmental Studies and Forestry

Substantial increase of organic carbon storage in Chinese lakes

D. Liu, K. Shi, et al.

Explore how extensive research by Dong Liu and colleagues reveals significant variability in organic carbon storage across 24,366 Chinese lakes over nearly four decades. Discover the implications of intensified human activities on carbon sequestration in lakes, a key component in combating climate change.

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Playback language: English
Abstract
Previous studies typically assumed a constant total organic carbon (OC) storage in the lake water column, neglecting its significant variability within a changing world. Based on extensive field data and satellite monitoring techniques, we demonstrate considerable spatiotemporal variability in OC concentration and storage for 24,366 Chinese lakes during 1984–2023. Here we show that dissolved OC concentration is high in northwest saline lakes and particulate OC concentration is high in southeast eutrophic lakes. Along with increasing OC concentration and water volume, dissolved and particulate OC storage increase by 44.6% and 33.5%, respectively. Intensified human activities, water input, and wind disturbance are the key drivers for increasing OC storage. Moreover, higher OC storage further leads to an 11.0% increase in nationwide OC burial and a decrease in carbon emissions from 71.1% of northwest lakes. Similar changes are occurring globally, which suggests that lakes are playing an increasingly important role in carbon sequestration.
Publisher
Nature Communications
Published On
Sep 14, 2024
Authors
Dong Liu, Kun Shi, Peng Chen, Nuoxiao Yan, Lishan Ran, Tiit Kutser, Andrew N. Tyler, Evangelos Spyrakos, R. lestyn Woolway, Yunlin Zhang, Hongtao Duan
Tags
organic carbon
lakes
carbon storage
spatiotemporal variability
human activities
carbon sequestration
Chinese lakes
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