Cross-scale ensemble projections of dissolved organic carbon dynamics in boreal forest streams

被引:0
作者
Stephen K. Oni
Martyn N. Futter
Claudia Teutschbein
Hjalmar Laudon
机构
[1] Swedish University of Agricultural Sciences,Department of Aquatic Sciences and Assessment
[2] Uppsala University,Department of Earth Sciences
[3] Swedish University of Agricultural Sciences,Department of Forest Ecology and Management
来源
Climate Dynamics | 2014年 / 42卷
关键词
Ensemble projections; Climate change; Dissolved organic carbon; Boreal forest; Bias correction; RCM;
D O I
暂无
中图分类号
学科分类号
摘要
Climate is an important driver of dissolved organic carbon (DOC) dynamics in boreal catchments characterized by networks of streams within forest-wetland landscape mosaics. In this paper, we assess how climate change may affect stream DOC concentrations ([DOC]) and export from boreal forest streams with a multi-model ensemble approach. First, we apply an ensemble of regional climate models (RCMs) to project soil temperatures and stream-flows. These data are then used to drive two biogeochemical models of surface water DOC: (1) The Integrated Catchment model for Carbon (INCA-C), a detailed process-based model of DOC operating at the catchment scale, and (2) The Riparian Integration Model (RIM), a simple dynamic hillslope scale model of stream [DOC]. All RCMs project a consistent increase in temperature and precipitation as well as a shift in spring runoff peaks from May to April. However, they present a considerable range of possible future runoff conditions with an ensemble median increase of 31 % between current and future (2061–2090) conditions. Both biogeochemical models perform well in describing the dynamics of present-day stream [DOC] and fluxes, but disagree in their future projections. Here, we assess possible futures in three boreal catchments representative of forest, mire and mixed landscape elements. INCA-C projects a wider range of stream [DOC] due to its temperature sensitivity, whereas RIM gives consistently larger inter-annual variation and a wider range of exports due to its sensitivity to hydrological variations. The uncertainties associated with modeling complex processes that control future DOC dynamics in boreal and temperate catchments are still the main limitation to our understanding of DOC mechanisms under changing climate conditions. Novel, currently overlooked or unknown drivers may appear that will present new challenges to modelling DOC in the future.
引用
收藏
页码:2305 / 2321
页数:16
相关论文
共 349 条
[1]  
Aherne J(2008)The impacts of future climate change and sulphur emission reductions on acidification recovery at Plastic Lake, Ontario Hydrol Earth Syst Sci 12 383-392
[2]  
Futter MN(1993)Boreal forests and tundra Water Air Soil Pollut 70 39-53
[3]  
Dillon PJ(2009)Hydrological control of organic carbon support for bacterial growth in boreal headwater streams Microb Ecol 57 170-178
[4]  
Apps M(2006)A manifesto for the equifinality thesis J Hydrol 320 18-36
[5]  
Kurz W(2009)A streamflow forecasting framework using multiple climate and hydrological models1 J Am Water Res Assoc (JAWRA) 45 828-843
[6]  
Luxmoore R(2000)Effects of asynchronous snowmelt on flushing of dissolved organic carbon: a mixing model approach Hydrol Process 14 3291-3308
[7]  
Nilsson L(2007)Photooxidation of wetland and riverine dissolved organic matter: altered copper complexation and organic composition Hydrobiologia 579 95-113
[8]  
Sedjo R(2004)A spatially explicit watershed-scale analysis of dissolved organic carbon in Adirondack lakes Ecol Appl 14 839-854
[9]  
Schmidt R(2010)Inter-comparison of hydro-climatic regimes across northern catchments: synchronicity, resistance and resilience Hydrol Process 24 3591-3602
[10]  
Simpson L(2013)Performance and uncertainty evaluation of empirical downscaling methods in quantifying the climate change impacts on hydrology over two North American river basins J Hydrol 479 200-214