2003
DOI: 10.1046/j.1365-2486.2003.00619.x
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The catchment and climate regulation of pCO2 in boreal lakes

Abstract: The regulation of surface water pCO2 was studied in a set of 33 unproductive boreal lakes of different humic content, situated along a latitudinal gradient (57°N to 64°N) in Sweden. The lakes were sampled four times during one year, and analyzed on a wide variety of water chemistry parameters. With only one exception, all lakes were supersaturated with CO2 with respect to the atmosphere at all sampling occasions. pCO2 was closely related to the DOC concentration in lakes, which in turn was mainly regulated by … Show more

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Cited by 343 publications
(354 citation statements)
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“…In this study, significant correlations between DOC concentrations and this ratio were obtained only when the natural lakes were plotted with the wood harvested systems (Lake Bouleau excluded), suggesting that DOC concentrations are more closely linked to the additional inputs of allochthonous OM caused by increased erosion and OM leaching in the wood harvested systems rather than to natural OM inputs from a large watershed [Sobek et al, 2003].…”
Section: Using Water Chemistry and Bulk Analyses To Study Carbon Cyclmentioning
confidence: 65%
“…In this study, significant correlations between DOC concentrations and this ratio were obtained only when the natural lakes were plotted with the wood harvested systems (Lake Bouleau excluded), suggesting that DOC concentrations are more closely linked to the additional inputs of allochthonous OM caused by increased erosion and OM leaching in the wood harvested systems rather than to natural OM inputs from a large watershed [Sobek et al, 2003].…”
Section: Using Water Chemistry and Bulk Analyses To Study Carbon Cyclmentioning
confidence: 65%
“…The first is that cells are transported from the drainage area to the lake and thereby influence the composition of the community by displacement of other cells. The second possible explanation is that the water flowing from the drainage area influences the character of the lake water, e.g., in the amount and character of the dissolved organic carbon (Sobek et al 2003), which in turn, being an important substrate for the bacteria, selects a certain composition of the bacterial community. Discriminant analysis was used as a means to investigate which environmental factors statistically best explain the lake categories we defined.…”
Section: Materials and Methods-study Sites And Samplingmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Consideration of lakes as an important component of the terrestrial carbon (C) cycle has focused primarily on their processing of externally derived dissolved organic carbon (DOC) [1][2][3]. At high DOC loading, lakes are often heterotrophic (net ecosystem respiration is greater than primary productivity), which results in a net efflux of CO 2 to the atmosphere [4].…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%