CO2:O2 balance in boreal freshwaters in a changing climate
2022
Allesson, Lina
Many lakes worldwide are supersaturated with CO2, making them net emitters of CO2 to the atmosphere. In order to predict the future and be able to mitigate the effects of climate change, knowledge of the processes behind increased CO2 saturation is crucial. I found that the amount of organic carbon of terrestrial origin in lakes is the main regulator of CO2 production and that the dominating process is bacterial respiration, increasing with increasing amounts of organic carbon. I also found that this is not necessarily the case in all lakes. The amount of coniferous forest in the catchment has a key role in this coupling between organic carbon and bacterial respiration. Because of climate and environmental change, an increasing amount of organic carbon from the surrounding ecosystems enters lakes. While bacteria use this carbon as energy source, it is also brown to its colour and therefore shades algae and inhibits photosynthesis. In this way, the productivity of the lake may be affected, having implications throughout the entire food web, affecting all from microorganisms to predating fish.
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تم تزويد هذا السجل من قبل University of Oslo