Evidence suggests that lakes are important sites for atmospheric CO 2 exchange and so play a substantial role in the global carbon budget. Previous research has 2 weaknesses: (1) most data have been collected only during the open-water or summer seasons, and (2) data are concentrated principally on natural lakes in northern latitudes. Here, we report on the full annual cycle of atmospheric CO 2 exchanges of 15 oligotrophic to eutrophic reservoirs in the Glacial Till Plains of the United States. With one exception, these reservoirs showed an overall loss of CO 2 during the year, with most values within the lower range reported for temperate lakes. There was a strong cross-system seasonal pattern: an average of 70% of total annual CO 2 efflux occurred by the end of spring mixis; some 20% of annual flux was reabsorbed during summer stratification; and the remaining 50% of efflux was lost during autumnal mixing. Net annual flux was negatively correlated with depth and positively correlated with both water residence time and DOC, with the smallest annual CO 2 efflux measured in shallow fertile impoundments. Strong correlations yield relationships allowing regional up-scaling of CO 2 evasion. Understanding lacustrine CO 2 uptake and evasion requires seasonal analyses across the full range of lake trophic states and morphometric attributes.
Introduction Study site Methods Results Discussion 20 Acknowledgements References CHAPTER 3. STREAM CARBON FLUX AND FRACTIONATION: INFLUENCE OF DISCHARGE, LAND USE, AND CLIMATE Abstract Introduction Methods Study site Sampling methods Results Discussion Acknowledgements References CHAPTER 4. GENERAL CONCLUSIONS APPENDIX A. RAW DATA FOR CHAPTER 2 APPENDIX B. CATCHMENT CHARACTERISTICS FOR CHAPTER 3 APPENDIX C. CLIMATE CHARACTERISTICS FOR CHAPTER 3 APPENDIX D. REGRESSION TABLES FOR CHAPTER 3
scite is a Brooklyn-based organization that helps researchers better discover and understand research articles through Smart Citations–citations that display the context of the citation and describe whether the article provides supporting or contrasting evidence. scite is used by students and researchers from around the world and is funded in part by the National Science Foundation and the National Institute on Drug Abuse of the National Institutes of Health.