Fluvial Carbon Dynamics across the Land to Ocean Continuum of Great
Tropical Rivers: the Amazon and Congo
Abstract
Many rivers systems of the world are super-saturated in dissolved CO2
(pCO2) relative to equilibrium with the atmosphere — why? Here we
compare the coupled organic matter and pCO2 dynamics of the world’s two
largest river systems, the Amazon and Congo, where data sets enable
insights into the overall functioning of the respective basins.
Discharge is the primary control on particulate (POC) and dissolved
organic carbon (DOC) export in both the Amazon and Congo Rivers. Total
suspended sediments (TSS) yield from the Amazon is twenty times greater
per unit area than the Congo. However, despite low TSS concentrations,
the Congo has a POC content approximately five times higher than the
Amazon. The organic rich character of both watersheds is reflected in
the DOC export, with the Amazon exporting ~ 11% and the
Congo ~ 5% of the global land to ocean flux, based on
measurements from the last discharge gauging stations. But care should
be taken when describing estimates of TSS and carbon to the ocean.
Processing and sequestration in tidal and coastal areas can
significantly alter TSS and carbon delivery, and last discharge gauging
stations are typically hundreds of kilometers from the sea. pCO2 in the
Amazon mainstem ranges from 1,000 to 10,000 μatm, with floodplain lakes
ranging from 20 to 20,000 μatm. Concentrations in the Congo mainstem are
lower, with maximum values of ~5,000 μatm observed. The
elevated level of pCO2 even as far as the mouth of such major rivers as
the Amazon and Congo, up to thousands of kilometers from CO2-rich small
streams, poses a most interesting question — what set of processes
maintains such high levels? The answer is presumably some combination of
instream metabolism of organic matter of terrestrial and floodplain
origin, and/or injection of very high pCO2 water from local floodplains
or tributaries.