Spatial and Seasonal Variation in Surface Water pCO sub(2) in the Ganges, Brahmaputra, and Meghna Rivers on the Indian Subcontinent

Recent studies have remarked on the importance of direct CO sub(2) release from river water into the atmosphere on the global carbon cycle over a short timescale. In this study, we investigated carbonate systems, including spatial and seasonal variations of pCO sub(2), in three major Himalayan river...

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Published inAquatic geochemistry Vol. 21; no. 5; pp. 437 - 458
Main Authors Manaka, Takuya, Ushie, Hiroyuki, Araoka, Daisuke, Otani, Souya, Inamura, Akihiko, Suzuki, Atsushi, Zakir Hossain, HM, Kawahata, Hodaka
Format Journal Article
LanguageEnglish
Published 01.09.2015
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Summary:Recent studies have remarked on the importance of direct CO sub(2) release from river water into the atmosphere on the global carbon cycle over a short timescale. In this study, we investigated carbonate systems, including spatial and seasonal variations of pCO sub(2), in three major Himalayan rivers in Bangladesh: the Ganges, Brahmaputra, and Meghna Rivers, and their potential importance. Although pCO sub(2) is known to be low in the upper reaches of these rivers, owing to active chemical weathering, we observed pCO sub(2) values higher than the atmospheric pCO sub(2) level along their lower reaches, where deep soils have developed and where high air temperatures promote active soil respiration. By a simple mixing calculation, we found that seasonal variations in these river water carbonate systems are controlled by subsurface water flows. In the rainy season, most of the lowlands are inundated, and the contribution of subsurface flow to river water carbonate systems increases, resulting in higher pCO sub(2) values. In future research, more detailed spatial and seasonal investigations are required to clarify the role of terrestrial ecosystems, including rivers and the CO sub(2) flux to the atmosphere, in the global carbon cycle and to examine how that role will change under global warming.
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ISSN:1380-6165
1573-1421
DOI:10.1007/s10498-015-9262-2