Journal of Water and Climate Change (Jun 2023)

Flux and stable isotope fractionation of CO2 in a mesic prairie headwater stream

  • Brock S. Norwood,
  • Randy L. Stotler,
  • Andrea Brookfield,
  • Pamela L. Sullivan,
  • G. L. Macpherson

DOI
https://doi.org/10.2166/wcc.2023.067
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 14, no. 6
pp. 1961 – 1976

Abstract

Read online

The carbon dioxide (CO2) fluxes from headwater streams are not well quantified and could be a source of significant carbon, particularly in systems underlain by carbonate lithology. Also, the sensitivity of carbonate systems to changes in temperature will make these fluxes even more significant as climate changes. This study quantifies small-scale CO2 efflux and estimates annual CO2 emission from a headwater stream at the Konza Prairie Long-Term Ecological Research Site and Biological Station (Konza), in a complex terrain of horizontal, alternating limestones and shales with small-scale karst features. CO2 effluxes ranged from 2.2 to 214 g CO2 m−2 day−1 (mean: 20.9 CO2 m−2 day−1). Downstream of point groundwater discharge sources, CO2 efflux decreased, over 2 m, to 3–40% of the point-source flux, while δ13C-CO2 increased, ranging from −9.8 ‰ to −23.2 ‰ V-PDB. The δ13C-CO2 increase was not strictly proportional to the CO2 flux but related to the origin of vadose zone CO2. The high spatial and temporal variability of CO2 efflux from this headwater stream informs those doing similar measurements and those working on upscaling stream data, that local variability should be assessed to estimate the impact of headwater stream CO2 efflux on the global carbon cycle. HIGHLIGHTS An intermittent stream in merokarst terrain has highly variable efflux both spatially and temporally.; CO2 efflux was rapid: 2 m downstream of the point of groundwater discharge flux was 3–40% of the point-source flux.; δ13C-CO2 correlated negatively with CO2 fluxes except for two high-flux values, suggesting δ13C-CO2 is not a reliable indicator of CO2 flux.;

Keywords