Ecosystem Health and Sustainability (Mar 2017)

Fate of river‐transported carbon in china: implications for carbon cycling in coastal ecosystems

  • Yang Gao,
  • Tiantian Yang,
  • Yafeng Wang,
  • Guirui Yu

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1002/ehs2.1265
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 3, no. 3

Abstract

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Rivers play an important role in carbon (C) exchange between terrestrial and oceanic water bodies and the atmosphere. The aim of this study was to systematically quantify fluxes in riverine C export and C exchange in the air–sea interface of marine ecosystems in China. Results show that annual C transport from rivers to coastal ecosystems in China can reach up to 64.35 TgC, which accounts for approximately 4.8%–8.1% of global C transport from river systems. In the Bohai Sea, particulate inorganic carbon is the main form of C influx, and it can reach up to 20.79 TgC/yr. Conversely, dissolved inorganic carbon is the main form of C influx into the East China Sea, and it can reach up to 10.52 TgC/yr, which is 42.6% of the total annual C imported into the East China Sea. China's marine ecosystems including the Yellow Sea, the Bohai Sea, the East China Sea, and the South China Sea can absorb 65.06 TgC/yr from the atmosphere.

Keywords