In this contribution, a reactive-transport model describing weathering in soil profiles and at the watershed scale is coupled to a dynamic global vegetation model to calculate the dissolved load of continental waters on a 0.5 degrees latitude x 0.5 degrees longitude grid. The so-called Biosphere-Weathering at the Catchment Scale (B-WITCH) model is applied to the Orinoco watershed (South America). We show that B-WITCH is able to reproduce the main cation composition of the surface waters over the watershed. Sensitivity tests demonstrate that clay mineral reactivities are key factors controlling the calculated discharge of dissolved species. More specifically, our simulations show that the dissolution and precipitation rates of clay minerals in the weathering profiles are strongly intertwined, and that this coupling must be accurately described when modeling the weathering fluxes at the continental scale. A second set of sensitivity tests show that, for the tropical environment, land plants control the total base cation discharge through their impact on the soil hydrology, rather than through enhanced soil CO2 pressures. Indeed, the complete removal of the continental vegetation leads to an increase in the dissolved fluxes to the ocean by 80% because of the collapse in the evapotranspiration, resulting in a more efficient drainage of the weathering profiles. On the other hand, neglecting the root respiration and setting the soil CO2 pressure to the atmospheric level forces the total base cation discharge to decrease by only 20%.
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Costa MH, 2000, J CLIMATE, V13, P18, DOI 10.1175/1520-0442(2000)013<0018:CEODAD>2.0.CO