New insights into diel to interannual variation in carbon dioxide
emissions from lakes and reservoirs
Abstract
Accounting for temporal changes in carbon dioxide (CO2)
emissions from freshwaters remains a challenge for global and regional
carbon budgets. Here, we synthesize 171 site-months of eddy covariance
flux measurements of CO2 from 13 lakes and reservoirs in
the Northern Hemisphere (NH) and quantify the magnitude and dynamics at
multiple temporal scales. We found pronounced diel and sub-monthly
oscillatory variations in CO2 flux at all sites. Diel
variation converted sites to daily net sinks of CO2 in
only 11% of site-months. Upscaled annual emissions had an average of
25% (range 3-58%) interannual variation. Given temporal variation
remains under-represented in inventories of CO2
emissions from lakes and reservoirs, revisions in CO2
flux are needed using a better representation of sub-daily to
interannual variability. Constraining short- and long-term variability
is necessary to improve detection of temporal changes of
CO2 fluxes in response to natural and anthropogenic
drivers.