Six hard-water lakes were sampled May-August for 14 yr in a 52,000 km 2 catchment to identify the mechanisms that regulate the spatial and temporal variability of net atmospheric exchange of CO2 of lakes on the Northern Great Plains. Annual mean daily fluxes ranged from -100 to >200 mmol C m-2 d-1, while pCO2 values varied between 0.3 and 5500 Pa. We observed periods of net CO2 uptake (1995, 2000) and release (1998, 2006) resulting in synchronous variations in net CO2 flux among lakes. Furthermore, pCO2, pH, and chemical enhancement of CO2 influx all varied coherently among sites. Interannual variation in net CO2 flux and pCO2 was correlated strongly with pH, correlated weakly with other physical and chemical conditions, and was uncorrelated to algal biomass, productivity, or ecosystem respiration. In contrast, spatial variability of water-column pCO2 was correlated negatively to concentrations of soluble reactive phosphorus, total dissolved nitrogen, pH, and gross primary productivity, suggesting an important role of lake metabolism at large spatial scales. Finally, comparison with an additional 20 saline lakes demonstrated that changes in mean annual pH, pCO2, and CO2 flux during 2002-2007 were coherent in diverse lakes within a region of >100,000 km2 and suggest that climatic control of pH and pCO2 had an unexpectedly great effect on net CO2 flux through productive hard-water lake ecosystems. © 2009, by the American Society of Limnology and Oceanography, Inc.
CITATION STYLE
Finlay, K., Leavitt, P. R., Wissel, B., & Prairie, Y. T. (2009). Regulation of spatial and temporal variability of carbon flux in six hard-water lakes of the Northern Great Plains. Limnology and Oceanography, 54(6 PART 2), 2553–2564. https://doi.org/10.4319/lo.2009.54.6_part_2.2553
Mendeley helps you to discover research relevant for your work.