Abstract Dissolved organic carbon (DOC) and nitrogen (DON) are important energy and nutrient sources for aquatic ecosystems. In many northern temperate, freshwater systems DOC has increased in the past 50 years. Less is known about how changes in DOC may vary across latitudes, and whether changes in DON track those of DOC. Here, we present long‐term DOC and DON data from 74 streams distributed across seven sites in biomes ranging from the tropics to northern boreal forests with varying histories of atmospheric acid deposition. For each stream, we examined the temporal trends of DOC and DON concentrations and DOC:DON molar ratios. While some sites displayed consistent positive or negative trends in stream DOC and DON concentrations, changes in direction or magnitude were inconsistent at regional or local scales. DON trends did not always track those of DOC, though DOC:DON ratios increased over time for ~30% of streams. Our results indicate that the dissolved organic matter (DOM) pool is experiencing fundamental changes due to the recovery from atmospheric acid deposition. Changes in DOC:DON stoichiometry point to a shifting energy‐nutrient balance in many aquatic ecosystems. Sustained changes in the character of DOM can have major implications for stream metabolism, biogeochemical processes, food webs, and drinking water quality (including disinfection by‐products). Understanding regional and global variation in DOC and DON concentrations is important for developing realistic models and watershed management protocols to effectively target mitigation efforts aimed at bringing DOM flux and nutrient enrichment under control.
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Seasonal and Climatic Drivers of Wet Deposition Organic Matter at the Continental Scale
Abstract Dissolved organic matter (DOM) concentrations and composition within wet deposition are rarely monitored despite contributing a large input of bioavailable dissolved organic carbon (DOC) and nitrogen (DON) to the Earth's surface. Lacking from the literature are spatially comprehensive assessments of simultaneous measurements of wet deposition DOC and DON chemistry and their dependencies on metrics of climate and environmental factors. Here, we use archived precipitation samples from the US National Atmospheric Deposition Program collected in 2017 to 2018 from 17 sites across six ecoregions to investigate variability in the concentration and composition of depositional DOM. We hypothesize metrics of DOM chemistry vary with ecoregion, season, large‐scale climate drivers, and precipitation geographic source. Findings indicate differences in DOC and DON concentrations and loads among ecoregions. The highest wet deposition concentrations are from sites in the Northern Forests and lowest concentrations from sites in Marine West Coast Forests. Summer and autumn samples contained the highest DOC concentrations and DON concentrations that were consistently above detection limit, corresponding with seasonality of peak air temperatures and the phenology of the growing season in the northern hemisphere. Compositional trends suggest lighter DOM molecules in autumn and winter and heavier molecules in spring and summer. Climate drivers explain 51% of variation in DOM chemistry, revealing differing drivers on the concentrations and loads of DOC versus DON in wet deposition. This study highlights the necessity of incorporating DOC and DON measurements into national deposition monitoring networks to understand spatial and temporal feedbacks between climate change, atmospheric chemistry and landscape biogeochemistry.
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- Award ID(s):
- 2129383
- PAR ID:
- 10649277
- Publisher / Repository:
- American Geophysical Union
- Date Published:
- Journal Name:
- Journal of Geophysical Research: Biogeosciences
- Volume:
- 129
- Issue:
- 11
- ISSN:
- 2169-8953
- Format(s):
- Medium: X
- Sponsoring Org:
- National Science Foundation
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