Streams and rivers play a major biogeochemical role in the global carbon cycle and act as hot spots for carbon dioxide (CO) and methane (CH) emissions to the atmosphere, excepting their roles of transporting the water and carbon from the terrestrial environment to the ocean. While carbon gases have been of great global concern, systematic reviews are still scarce. Given recent recognition of the pervasiveness of CO and CH in streams and rivers, this study synthesized existing research and discoveries to identify patterns and controls for riverine CO and CH, knowledge gaps, and research opportunities. This study presented a conceptual framework for sources and the fates of CO/CH from streams and rivers and used this framework to understand the dynamic processes of fluvial carbon evasion and potential anthropogenic disturbances. Multiple environmental influences combined with different contributions of endogenous metabolism and terrigenous input, and the CO and CH in streams and rivers showed significant spatial and temporal variability on a global scale, regional scale, and watershed scale, which indicates a substantial challenge for understanding the larger-scale dynamics. For a clearer recognition of how the changing environment and human activities may modify fluvial CO and CH dynamics, this study constructed a system framework of controls on CO and CH production and persistence in streams and rivers. The framework of controls can be viewed in terms of endogenous environmental controls that influence river metabolism (organic matter, temperature, nutrients, pH, and alternative electron acceptors) and external factors, including geomorphic and hydrologic drivers and human activities (agriculture, damming, and urbanization). We point out that the carbon emissions from rivers should be integrated into the terrestrial carbon budget, and in the future, more attention should be given to research on the sources of CO and CH in rivers, the generation and diffusion of CO and CH at different interfaces, the spatiotemporal variability of riverine carbon emissions, and the response of riverine CO and CH dynamics to the changing environment and human activities.
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http://dx.doi.org/10.13227/j.hjkx.201701049 | DOI Listing |
Glob Chang Biol
January 2025
CAS Key Laboratory of Coastal Environmental Processes and Ecological Remediation, Yantai Institute of Coastal Zone Research (YIC), Chinese Academy of Sciences (CAS), Shandong Key Laboratory of Coastal Environmental Processes, YICCAS, Yantai, China.
Coastal wetlands contain very large carbon (C) stocks-termed as blue C-and their management has emerged as a promising nature-based solution for climate adaptation and mitigation. The interactions among sources, pools, and molecular compositions of soil organic C (SOC) within blue C ecosystems (BCEs) remain elusive. Here, we explore these interactions along an 18,000 km long coastal line of salt marshes, mangroves, and seagrasses in China.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFCien Saude Colet
December 2024
Universidade Estadual de Santa Cruz - Campus Soane Nazaré de Andrade. Rodovia Jorge Amado, km 16, Salobrinho. 45662-900. Ilhéus BA Brasil.
Part of this text resulted in a lecture presented at the opening of the 20th National Science and Technology Week of the Oswaldo Cruz Foundation in October 2023. It is the reflection of an Indigenous historian on her professional trajectory, considering the racism in force in the scientific community and the paths that the Indigenous knowledge rivers have traveled to demarcate writing as a field for securing the rights guaranteed in the 1988 Federal Constitution, constituting a space of resistance for the continuity of the Brazilian Indigenous peoples' plural existences.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFJ Antimicrob Chemother
January 2025
Department of Biotechnology, Nigeria Defence Academy, Kaduna, Nigeria.
Antimicrobial resistance (AMR) poses a great challenge to health systems all over the world. It is exacerbated by the abuse, misuse and overuse of antimicrobials in humans, animals, plants and the environment. This viewpoint emphasizes the critical need to address the challenges of AMR through an integrated, long-term approach that focuses on education, advocacy and collective action.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFSci Rep
January 2025
Institute of International Rivers and Eco-Security, Yunnan University, Kunming, 650500, China.
Eco-concrete is an engineered porous material, often used in pervious pavement and slope protection. Volcanic rock, due to its loose and porous structure, can absorb pollutants and improve the performance of eco-concrete. Here, this study determined the performance of eco-concrete modified with different contents of volcanic rock in sewage purification.
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