Worldwide dam building in large river basins has substantially altered the carbon cycle by trapping much of the riverine transported particulate organic carbon (POC) in terrestrial reservoirs. Here we take the Changjiang (Yangtze) River basin, in which~50,000 dams were built over the past 50 years, as an example to evaluate the effect of dam building on POC sequestration. We report the characteristics (elemental composition, radiocarbon and stable carbon isotopic compositions, and Raman spectra) of bulk POC in the lower Changjiang from October 2007 to September 2008, and we estimate the POC sequestration induced by dam building since the 1950s for the Changjiang Basin. Using radiocarbon measurements, we quantify the fraction of biospheric POC (POC bio ) and petrogenic POC (POC petro ) in Changjiang POC. Over the study period, around 25% of the Changjiang POC is radiocarbon-dead POC petro ; the remaining is POC bio with a mean radiocarbon age of~3.5 kyr. Studies on the East China Sea (ECS) shelf along with an oxidation experiment suggest that, prior to dam building, the Changjiang POC bio was significantly oxidized in the ECS margin. In contrast, high preservation of POC is observed in Changjiang reservoirs. Combining our POC data with hydrometric data sets, our study indicates that, over the past five decades, dam building may have largely shifted the Changjiang POC burial site from the ECS margin to terrestrial reservoirs. This shift in burial site preserved labile POC bio that would have been oxidized, suggesting a new temporary carbon sink. We estimate that dam building in the Changjiang has sequestered~4.9 ± 1.9 megatons POC bio every year since 2003, approximately 10% of the global riverine POC burial flux to the oceans.
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