4.7 Article

Drawdown zone can shift a floodplain-lake system from a steady carbon source to an unsteady carbon sink

Journal

AGRICULTURAL AND FOREST METEOROLOGY
Volume 327, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

ELSEVIER
DOI: 10.1016/j.agrformet.2022.109224

Keywords

Carbon cycle; Carbon pool; Carbon storage; Floodplain system; Water level fluctuations

Funding

  1. National Nature Science Foundation of China
  2. CAS Project for Young Scientists in Basic Research
  3. [42225103]
  4. [42141015]
  5. [YSBR- 037]

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Studies have shown that lake and reservoir systems globally are significant carbon sources. This study emphasizes the importance of considering the drawdown zone in lake-based carbon sink/source assessments. By incorporating the drawdown zone, the study found that the entire floodplain-lake system can shift from being a carbon source to a carbon sink based on water level fluctuations and area changes.
Studies have suggested that, globally, lake and reservoir systems constitute large carbon (C) sources. However, the drawdown zone where certain lake areas subject to water level fluctuations temporarily dry out, exposing sediment to the atmosphere, needs to be considered in lake-based C sink/source quantitative assessments. This study incorporates the drawdown zone into a lake-based quantitative approach to investigate C source/sink and C pool pattern stability in Poyang Lake and the surrounding wetland ecosystem, a typical floodplain-lake system case. By combining field sampling and remote sensing methods we found that from flooding to non-flooding periods, the C storage of Poyang Lake increased, leading to a steady C source. When accounting for the draw -down zone, however, the whole floodplain-lake system shifted from a C source to a C sink. Temperature drives changes in wetland C emissions and vegetation C production by affecting microbial organic carbon (OC) decomposition processes, to regulate this unsteady C source/sink lake system transformation processes (R2=0.97). Rainfall-driven water level and area changes can also influence C storage of the whole floodplain-lake system (R2=0.86). It is therefore necessary to integrate the drawdown zone into lake system qualification pro-cesses to ensure steady C source and sink states.

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