Estimating organic carbon burial in freshwater impoundments with a rapid-assessment model and geospatial analysis
Abstract
Freshwater ecosystems transport a tremendous amount of organic carbon (OC) from
terrestrial landscapes; however, freshwater systems have been poorly integrated into the
global carbon budget which focuses largely on the atmospheric, oceanic, and terrestrial
pools. Dams constructed along riverine systems greatly alter the hydrology leading to
increased sedimentation and therefore increased carbon burial rates. GIS provides the
generation of vast amounts of data on the watersheds and parameters linked to sediment
and OC sources. Land-use, climate, standing biomass, topography, and soil type are
correlated with allochthonous carbon inputs to freshwater ecosystems. Integrating these
geospatial data with the analysis of sediment samples has the potential to produce more
accurate models of OC burial rates and stock in freshwater impoundments. In this study,
two approaches were used to estimate OC burial in freshwater impoundments. The first
approach was a rapid assessment based on existing data from the reservoir sedimentation
database (RESSED) and generalizations about the OC content of sediments in
impoundments. This rapid assessment approach estimates OC accumulation rates in
freshwater impoundments to be 140.5 g OC/m2
/y (Adj. R2 = 0.7875, n = 1085). The
second was a geospatial approach which considered 24 independent variables including
data on land-cover, watershed morphology, soils, and above-ground biomass.
Independent variables were tabulated from various publicly available databases.
Sediment samples were collected across 4 level III ecoregions from 24 impoundments
and analyzed for OC content, the dependent variable in the model. The model estimated
the mean OC content of 5.88% (w/w) in impoundment sediments (Adj. R2 = 0.4955, n =
24). An additional model was created from the geospatial data to estimate the stock of
OC in freshwater impoundments. The mean predicted OC stock in the top 5 cm of
impoundment sediment is 783.4 g OC/m2 (Adj. R2 = 0.7122, n = 24). Extrapolations were
made for both assessments based on reported estimates of global impoundment surface
area. The sediment OC content predictions from the geospatial model were paired with
sedimentation rates and suggest a mean accumulation rate of 1533.4 g OC/m2
/y,
comparable to previous studies. Global extrapolations place estimates for the
accumulation of OC in freshwater impoundments at 36.3 and 396.5 Tg OC/y for the rapid
and geospatial assessments, respectively. Incorporating geospatial data proves to be
plausible when comparing to previous estimates.
Subject
Biotic communities
Geospatial data
Biology
Freshwater animals
Permanent Link
http://digital.library.wisc.edu/1793/82454Type
Thesis