Simulated In-Stream CO₂ Production With Changing Precipitation and Urbanization
Author/Creator ORCID
Date
Type of Work
Department
Program
Citation of Original Publication
Rights
This work was written as part of one of the author's official duties as an Employee of the United States Government and is therefore a work of the United States Government. In accordance with 17 U.S.C. 105, no copyright protection is available for such works under U.S. Law.
Public Domain
Public Domain
Subjects
Abstract
Increasing urbanization coupled to changes in precipitation magnitude confound our understanding of the carbon (C) movement and transformation in streams. Precipitation drives organic C into waterways, while watershed urbanization can increase the lability of dissolved organic carbon (DOC). The uncertainty about how these disturbances interact and influence CO₂ production hinders predictions of the urban stream C cycle and strategies for reducing stream CO₂ efflux. To understand the effects of precipitation and urbanization on the C cycle in streams, we simulated CO₂ production across two Baltimore watersheds (Maryland, U.S.A.) that span an urbanization gradient using AquaMEND, a multipool C decomposition model coupled to stream geochemistry. We hypothesized that precipitation-driven C loading and urbanization-enhanced DOC lability boost in-stream CO₂ production more in urban streams than in exurban streams. Urban streams showed a greater shift in CO₂ production in response to precipitation-driven C loading, while CO₂ production in exurban streams responded more to urbanization-driven changes in DOC lability. Over all streams, increasing C loading due to precipitation had a stronger effect on CO₂ production than changes in DOC lability, and the highest CO₂ production resulted when these disturbances co-occurred. These results suggest a shift in primary drivers of stream metabolism as landscapes transition from exurban to urban, and highlight that urban streams have high CO₂ production potential. This study reveals how urbanization and precipitation-driven C dynamics interact to shape stream metabolic responses, and demonstrates the importance of incorporating precipitation variability and land use change into efforts to assess and mitigate stream CO₂ production.
