Land Use Controls on the Spatial Variability of Dissolved Black Carbon in a Subtropical Watershed.

Environ Sci Technol

Southeast Environmental Research Center and Department of Chemistry and Biochemistry , Florida International University, Miami , Florida 33179 , United States.

Published: August 2018

AI Article Synopsis

  • Rivers export around 250 Pg of dissolved organic carbon (DOC) to coastal oceans, with changes in land use affecting its molecular composition and reactivity.
  • About 10% of this DOC is dissolved black carbon (DBC), produced from incomplete combustion of organic materials, yet the relationship between land use and DBC quality remains underexplored.
  • Research in Georgia’s Altamaha River watershed indicates that DBC is more complex and polycondensed in less disturbed areas, while areas with higher human activity show DBC enriched with lower molecular weight compounds, highlighting the impact of land use on carbon export and its implications for global nutrient cycling.

Article Abstract

Rivers export roughly 250 Pg of dissolved organic carbon (DOC) to coastal oceans. DOC exported from rivers can be a reflection of watershed dynamics, and changes in land use can lead to shifts in the molecular composition and reactivity of riverine DOC. About 10% of DOC exported from rivers is dissolved black carbon (DBC), a collection of polycondensed aromatic compounds derived from the incomplete combustion of biomass and fossil fuels. While DOC and DBC export are generally coupled, the effects of watershed land use on DBC quality are not well understood. In this study, DBC samples were collected throughout the Altamaha River watershed in Georgia, USA. DBC was characterized using the benzenepoly(carboxylic acid) method and Fourier transform ion cyclotron resonance mass spectrometry (FTICR-MS). DBC had a more polycondensed character in areas of the watershed with less anthropogenic disturbance. Furthermore, FTICR-MS revealed that DBC became enriched with a lower molecular weight, heteroatomic signature in response to higher anthropogenic activity. As global land cover continues to change, this study demonstrates on a localized scale that watershed land use can influence the export and composition of DBC, which may have further implications for global carbon and nutrient cycling.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1021/acs.est.8b00190DOI Listing

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