scholarly journals Differences and influencing factors related to underground water carbon uptake by karsts in the Houzhai Basin, southwestern China

Solid Earth ◽  
2016 ◽  
Vol 7 (4) ◽  
pp. 1259-1268
Author(s):  
Junyi Zhang ◽  
Zihao Bian ◽  
Minghong Dai ◽  
Lachun Wang ◽  
Chunfen Zeng ◽  
...  

Abstract. Carbon sink in karstic areas is very important at a global scale. Consequently, accurate determination of the carbon sink of karst ecosystems has become a core issue in research. We used flow and carbon ion concentration data from three stations with different environmental background conditions in the Houzhai Basin, southwestern China, to analyse the differences in carbon uptake between stations and to determine their impact factors. The results show that carbon sink discharge was mainly controlled by the flow at each site. Preliminary analysis indicated that the rapid increase in flow only had a partial dilution effect on the ion concentrations due to the high speed and stability of chemical carbonate weathering. The Land-Use and Cover-Change (LUCC) type had important effects on the bicarbonate ion concentrations; under stable run-off conditions, the influence of flow variation on the ion concentration was lower than the effects of chemical carbonate weathering on bicarbonate ion concentrations under different environmental conditions (a comparison of Laoheitan and Liugu stations showed a difference of 150 %). However, if run-off increased significantly, the impact of run-off variation on bicarbonate ions was greater than the effects of chemical carbonate weathering caused under different environmental conditions. This work provides a reference for the calculation of the karst geological carbon sink.

2016 ◽  
Author(s):  
Junyi Zhang ◽  
Zihao Bian ◽  
Minghong Dai ◽  
Lachun Wang ◽  
Weici Su

Abstract. Karst geological carbon sink is an important part of the global carbon sink, so how to get the accurate carbon sink of karst ecosystem has become the core issue of the research. We used flow and carbon ion concentration data from three stations with different environmental background conditions in the Houzhai basin to analyze the differences in carbon uptake between stations and their impact factors. Results show that carbon sink discharge was mainly controlled by the flow of each site. The rapid increase in flow only has a partial dilution effect on ion concentrations, preliminary analysis considered due to the high speed and stability of chemical carbonate weathering. LUCC type has important effects on the bicarbonate ions concentrations, if runoff is stable, the influence of flow variation on ion concentration will be less than the effects of chemical carbonate weathering in different environmental conditions (comparison of Laoheitan and Liugu station results is 150 %) on bicarbonate ion concentrations. However, if runoff increases significantly, the impact of runoff variation on bicarbonate ions will be greater than the effects of chemical carbonate weathering by different environmental conditions (comparison results of Laoheitan and Maoshuikeng station). This work provides a reference for the calculation of karst geological carbon sink.


2010 ◽  
Vol 7 (1) ◽  
pp. 1431-1457
Author(s):  
G. Lilbæk ◽  
J. W. Pomeroy

Abstract. Meltwater ion concentration and infiltration rate into frozen soil both decline rapidly as snowmelt progresses. Their temporal association is highly non-linear and a covariance term must be added in order to use time-averaged values of snowmelt ion concentration and infiltration rate to calculate chemical infiltration. The covariance is labelled enhanced infiltration and represents the additional ion load that infiltrates due to the timing of high meltwater concentration and infiltration rate. Previous assessment of the impact of enhanced infiltration has been theoretical; thus, experiments were carried out to examine whether enhanced infiltration can be recognized in controlled laboratory settings and to what extent its magnitude varies with soil moisture. Three experiments were carried out: dry soil conditions, unsaturated soil conditions, and saturated soil conditions. Chloride solution was added to the surface of frozen soil columns; the concentration decreased exponentially over time to simulate snow meltwater. Infiltration excess water was collected and its chloride concentration and volume determined. Ion load infiltrating the frozen soil was specified by mass conservation. Results showed that infiltrating ion load increased with decreasing soil moisture as expected; however, the impact of enhanced infiltration increased considerably with increasing soil moisture. Enhanced infiltration caused 2.5 times more ion load to infiltrate during saturated conditions than that estimated using time-averaged ion concentrations and infiltration rates alone. For unsaturated conditions, enhanced infiltration was reduced to 1.45 and for dry soils to 1.3. Reduction in infiltration excess ion load due to enhanced infiltration increased slightly (2–5%) over time, being greatest for the dry soil (45%) and least for the saturated soil (6%). The importance of timing between high ion concentrations and high infiltration rates was best illustrated in the unsaturated experiment, which showed large inter-column variation in enhanced ion infiltration due to variation in this temporal covariance.


2021 ◽  
Vol 232 (10) ◽  
Author(s):  
Agnieszka Cygan ◽  
Andrzej Kłos ◽  
Piotr Wieczorek

Abstract The quality of surface waters in the territory of Poland, despite the implemented remedial measures, is mostly classified as bad. This article presents the results of research on the composition of water macroelements in 24 artificial reservoirs located in Opole province (southern Poland), searching for the reasons behind their pollution. Concentrations of the anions F−, Cl−, Br−, NO2−, NO3−, PO43− and SO42− and cations Na+, NH4+, K+, Mg2+ and Ca2+ were taken into account. An analysis of seasonal changes was carried out and, on the example of a dam reservoir (Turawa Big Reservoir), a multi-point analysis of the distribution of ion concentrations in water at the reservoir surface was also carried out. It was shown that retention and flow-through reservoirs, where the main source of pollution is the water feeding the reservoirs, are the most vulnerable to pollution. The second group consists of closed reservoirs located in industrial and agricultural areas, which are exposed to pollution from rainwater run-off and field leachate. In the case of reservoirs created in marl mining areas, a significant effect was also indicated from the chemical composition of the substrate on the formation of ionic equilibria in waters filling the excavations. The research shows that there are no hard and fast rules regarding the seasonal variability of ion concentrations during the growing season, indicating that eutrophic reservoirs show greater variability of ion concentration. Graphical Abstract


2020 ◽  
Vol 12 (1) ◽  
pp. 145 ◽  
Author(s):  
Samuel Takele Kenea ◽  
Lev D. Labzovskii ◽  
Tae-Young Goo ◽  
Shanlan Li ◽  
Young-Suk Oh ◽  
...  

There are still large uncertainties in the estimates of net ecosystem exchange of CO2 (NEE) with atmosphere in Asia, particularly in the boreal and eastern part of temperate Asia. To understand these uncertainties, we assessed the CarbonTracker Asia (CTA2017) estimates of the spatial and temporal distributions of NEE through a comparison with FLUXCOM and the global inversion models from the Copernicus Atmospheric Monitoring Service (CAMS), Monitoring Atmospheric Composition and Climate (MACC), and Jena CarboScope in Asia, as well as examining the impact of the nesting approach on the optimized NEE flux during the 2001–2013 period. The long-term mean carbon uptake is reduced in Asia, which is −0.32 ± 0.22 PgC yr−1, whereas −0.58 ± 0.26 PgC yr−1 is shown from CT2017 (CarbonTracker global). The domain aggregated mean carbon uptake from CTA2017 is found to be lower by 23.8%, 44.8%, and 60.5% than CAMS, MACC, and Jena CarboScope, respectively. For example, both CTA2017 and CT2017 models captured the interannual variability (IAV) of the NEE flux with a different magnitude and this leads to divergent annual aggregated results. Differences in the estimated interannual variability of NEE in response to El Niño–Southern Oscillation (ENSO) may result from differences in the transport model resolutions. These inverse models’ results have a substantial difference compared to FLUXCOM, which was found to be −5.54 PgC yr−1. On the one hand, we showed that the large NEE discrepancies between both inversion models and FLUXCOM stem mostly from the tropical forests. On the other hand, CTA2017 exhibits a slightly better correlation with FLUXCOM over grass/shrub, fields/woods/savanna, and mixed forest than CT2017. The land cover inconsistency between CTA2017 and FLUXCOM is therefore one driver of the discrepancy in the NEE estimates. The diurnal averaged NEE flux between CTA2017 and FLUXCOM exhibits better agreement during the carbon uptake period than the carbon release period. Both CTA2017 and CT2017 revealed that the overall spatial patterns of the carbon sink and source are similar, but the magnitude varied with seasons and ecosystem types, which is mainly attributed to differences in the transport model resolutions. Our findings indicate that substantial inconsistencies in the inversions and FLUXCOM mainly emerge during the carbon uptake period and over tropical forests. The main problems are underrepresentation of FLUXCOM NEE estimates by limited eddy covariance flux measurements, the role of CO2 emissions from land use change not accounted for by FLUXCOM, sparseness of surface observations of CO2 concentrations used by the assimilation systems, and land cover inconsistency. This suggested that further scrutiny on the FLUXCOM and inverse estimates is most likely required. Such efforts will reduce inconsistencies across various NEE estimates over Asia, thus mitigating ecosystem-driven errors that propagate the global carbon budget. Moreover, this work also recommends further investigation on how the changes/updates made in CarbonTracker affect the interannual variability of the aggregate and spatial pattern of NEE flux in response to the ENSO effect over the region of interest.


2020 ◽  
Author(s):  
Samuel Takele Kenea ◽  
Lev Labzovskii ◽  
Tae‐Young Goo ◽  
Shanlan Li ◽  
Young‐Suk Oh ◽  
...  

<p>There are still large uncertainties in the estimates of net ecosystem exchange of CO<sub>2</sub><br>(NEE) with atmosphere in Asia, particularly in the boreal and eastern part of temperate Asia. To<br>understand these uncertainties, we assessed the CarbonTracker Asia (CTA2017) estimates of the<br>spatial and temporal distributions of NEE through a comparison with FLUXCOM and the global<br>inversion models from the Copernicus Atmospheric Monitoring Service (CAMS), Monitoring<br>Atmospheric Composition and Climate (MACC), and Jena CarboScope in Asia, as well as<br>examining the impact of the nesting approach on the optimized NEE flux during the 2001–2013<br>period. The long‐term mean carbon uptake is reduced in Asia, which is −0.32 ± 0.22 PgC yr<sup>‐1</sup>,<br>whereas –0.58 ± 0.26 PgC yr<sup>‐1</sup> is shown from CT2017 (CarbonTracker global). The domain<br>aggregated mean carbon uptake from CTA2017 is found to be lower by 23.8%, 44.8%, and 60.5%<br>than CAMS, MACC, and Jena CarboScope, respectively. For example, both CTA2017 and CT2017<br>models captured the interannual variability (IAV) of the NEE flux with a different magnitude and<br>this leads to divergent annual aggregated results. Differences in the estimated interannual<br>variability of NEE in response to El Niño–Southern Oscillation (ENSO) may result from<br>differences in the transport model resolutions. These inverse models’ results have a substantial<br>difference compared to FLUXCOM, which was found to be –5.54 PgC yr<sup>‐1</sup>. On the one hand, we<br>showed that the large NEE discrepancies between both inversion models and FLUXCOM stem<br>mostly from the tropical forests. On the other hand, CTA2017 exhibits a slightly better correlation<br>with FLUXCOM over grass/shrub, fields/woods/savanna, and mixed forest than CT2017. The land<br>cover inconsistency between CTA2017 and FLUXCOM is therefore one driver of the discrepancy in<br>the NEE estimates. The diurnal averaged NEE flux between CTA2017 and FLUXCOM exhibits<br>better agreement during the carbon uptake period than the carbon release period. Both CTA2017<br>and CT2017 revealed that the overall spatial patterns of the carbon sink and source are similar, but<br>the magnitude varied with seasons and ecosystem types, which is mainly attributed to differences<br>in the transport model resolutions. Our findings indicate that substantial inconsistencies in the<br>inversions and FLUXCOM mainly emerge during the carbon uptake period and over tropical<br>forests. The main problems are underrepresentation of FLUXCOM NEE estimates by limited eddy<br>covariance flux measurements, the role of CO<sub>2</sub> emissions from land use change not accounted for<br>by FLUXCOM, sparseness of surface observations of CO<sub>2</sub> concentrations used by the assimilation<br>systems, and land cover inconsistency. This suggested that further scrutiny on the FLUXCOM and<br>inverse estimates is most likely required. Such efforts will reduce inconsistencies across various<br>NEE estimates over Asia, thus mitigating ecosystem‐driven errors that propagate the global<br>carbon budget. Moreover, this work also recommends further investigation on how the<br>changes/updates made in CarbonTracker affect the interannual variability of the aggregate and<br>spatial pattern of NEE flux in response to the ENSO effect over the region of interest.</p>


2010 ◽  
Vol 14 (7) ◽  
pp. 1365-1374 ◽  
Author(s):  
G. Lilbæk ◽  
J. W. Pomeroy

Abstract. Meltwater ion concentration and infiltration rate into frozen soil both decline rapidly as snowmelt progresses. Their temporal association is highly non-linear and a covariance term must be added in order to use time-averaged values of snowmelt ion concentration and infiltration rate to calculate chemical infiltration. The covariance is labelled enhanced ion infiltration and represents the additional ion load that infiltrates due to the timing of high meltwater concentration and infiltration rate. Previous assessment of the impact of enhanced ion infiltration has been theoretical; thus, experiments were carried out to examine whether enhanced infiltration can be recognized in controlled laboratory settings and to what extent its magnitude varies with soil moisture. Three experiments were carried out: dry soil conditions, unsaturated soil conditions, and saturated soil conditions. Chloride solutions were added to the surface of frozen soil columns; the concentration decreased exponentially over time to simulate snow meltwater. Infiltration excess water was collected and its chloride concentration and volume determined. Ion load infiltrating the frozen soil was specified by mass conservation. Results showed that infiltrating ion load increased with decreasing soil moisture as expected; however, the impact of enhanced ion infiltration increased considerably with increasing soil moisture. Enhanced infiltration caused 2.5 times more ion load to infiltrate during saturated conditions than that estimated using time-averaged ion concentrations and infiltration rates alone. For unsaturated conditions, enhanced ion infiltration was reduced to 1.45 and for dry soils to 1.3. Reduction in infiltration excess ion load due to enhanced infiltration increased slightly (2–5%) over time, being greatest for the dry soil (45%) and least for the saturated soil (6%). The importance of timing between high ion concentrations and high infiltration rates was best illustrated in the unsaturated experiment, which showed large inter-column variation in enhanced ion infiltration due to variation in this temporal covariance.


Animals ◽  
2021 ◽  
Vol 11 (7) ◽  
pp. 1901
Author(s):  
Ana Gonzalez-Martinez ◽  
Carmen De-Pablos-Heredero ◽  
Martin González ◽  
Jorge Rodriguez ◽  
Cecilio Barba ◽  
...  

The Guayas, located in Ecuador, is the largest basin in the Pacific Ocean and has an inventory of 123 native freshwater species. Most of these are endemic species that are threatened or at-risk due to anthropogenic activity and the modification, fragmentation, and destruction of habitats. The aim of this study was to determine the morphometric variation in three wild populations of Brycon dentex in the Guayas basin rivers and their connections to fishing management and environmental conditions. A total of 200 mature fish were captured, and 26 morphometric parameters were measured. The fishing policies (Hypothesis 1) and environmental conditions (Hypothesis 2) were considered fixed factors and were validated by t-tests. The morphological variation among the three populations (Hypothesis 3) was validated through a discriminant analysis. Fishing policies and resource management were found to generate morphological differences associated with body development. In addition, the environmental conditions were found to influence the size and structure of Brycon dentex populations. The analyzed populations were discriminated by the generated morphometric models, which differentiated Cluster 1 (Quevedo and Mocache rivers) with high fishing pressure from Cluster 2 (Pintado river) with medium–low fishing pressure. Morphometric differentiation by discriminant analysis is a direct and economic methodology that can be applied as an indicator of diversity maintenance.


2019 ◽  
Vol 11 (18) ◽  
pp. 5022 ◽  
Author(s):  
Junju Zhou ◽  
Juan Xiang ◽  
Lanying Wang ◽  
Guoshuang Zhong ◽  
Guofeng Zhu ◽  
...  

Groundwater chemistry has an important impact on the vegetation distribution in inland areas. An in-depth understanding of the impact of groundwater chemistry on vegetation can help in developing an effective management strategy to protect the inland ecosystem. The aim of this study was to identify the influence of groundwater chemicals on species diversity and the distribution characteristics of wetland plants at multiple scales based on the groundwater chemical data from 15 sampling points and the distribution data of 13 plants in the Sugan Lake Wetland in 2016. The results show that the groundwater of the Sugan Lake Wetland is weakly alkaline, with high salinity and hardness; the water chemical type is Na-SO4-Cl; the concentration of the major water chemical parameters is significantly different and is the highest in the northwest, followed by the southwest, and is the lowest in the east; with an increase in the groundwater depth, the concentration of major water chemical parameters first showed an increasing trend followed by a decreasing trend; Artemisia frigida Willd, Poa annua L. and Triglochin maritimum L. were adapted to the environment with a higher ion concentration of the groundwater, and their salt resistance was the strongest; Blysmus sinocompressus and Polygonum are more adapted to the environment with lower salinity and hardness of groundwater; Thermopsis lanceolata has stronger adaptability to the ion concentration, salinity, and hardness of groundwater; other plants are adapted to environments where the ion concentration, salinity, and hardness of the groundwater are moderate.


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