Home > Research > Publications & Outputs > Sources and fluxes of inorganic carbon in a dee...
View graph of relations

Sources and fluxes of inorganic carbon in a deep, oligotrophic lake (Loch Ness, Scotland)

Research output: Contribution to Journal/MagazineJournal articlepeer-review

Published

Standard

Sources and fluxes of inorganic carbon in a deep, oligotrophic lake (Loch Ness, Scotland). / Jones, Roger; Grey, Jonathan; Quarmby, Christopher et al.
In: Global Biogeochemical Cycles, Vol. 15, No. 4, 12.2001, p. 863-870.

Research output: Contribution to Journal/MagazineJournal articlepeer-review

Harvard

Jones, R, Grey, J, Quarmby, C & Sleep, D 2001, 'Sources and fluxes of inorganic carbon in a deep, oligotrophic lake (Loch Ness, Scotland)', Global Biogeochemical Cycles, vol. 15, no. 4, pp. 863-870. https://doi.org/10.1029/2001GB001423

APA

Jones, R., Grey, J., Quarmby, C., & Sleep, D. (2001). Sources and fluxes of inorganic carbon in a deep, oligotrophic lake (Loch Ness, Scotland). Global Biogeochemical Cycles, 15(4), 863-870. https://doi.org/10.1029/2001GB001423

Vancouver

Jones R, Grey J, Quarmby C, Sleep D. Sources and fluxes of inorganic carbon in a deep, oligotrophic lake (Loch Ness, Scotland). Global Biogeochemical Cycles. 2001 Dec;15(4):863-870. doi: 10.1029/2001GB001423

Author

Jones, Roger ; Grey, Jonathan ; Quarmby, Christopher et al. / Sources and fluxes of inorganic carbon in a deep, oligotrophic lake (Loch Ness, Scotland). In: Global Biogeochemical Cycles. 2001 ; Vol. 15, No. 4. pp. 863-870.

Bibtex

@article{f68462ae64ff415297fcfe941c122a18,
title = "Sources and fluxes of inorganic carbon in a deep, oligotrophic lake (Loch Ness, Scotland)",
abstract = "The main river inflows to Loch Ness and several depths in the water column within the loch were sampled over an annual cycle. The carbon isotope composition of total dissolved inorganic carbon (DIC) from the samples was determined as well as that of phytoplankton from the loch. Values of δ13C for DIC in the rivers indicated that this DIC was derived from soil respiration in the catchment and achieved only partial equilibrium with the atmosphere during river transport. Riverine loading accounted for most of the DIC in Loch Ness, and the great depth of the loch relative to its surface area allows only limited exchange with the atmosphere. Despite the low productivity in Loch Ness, DIC concentrations in the low alkalinity water are appreciably influenced by plankton metabolism, and seasonal fluctuations in δ13C of DIC and phytoplankton revealed the particular impact of photosynthetic carbon fixation on DIC. However, the photosynthetic depletion of DIC during summer does not offset the riverine loading sufficiently to prevent the loch waters being supersaturated with CO2 throughout the year. Annual efflux of CO2 from Loch Ness is estimated to be 253 × 106 mol yr−1, of which around one quarter may be due to net heterotrophic mineralization within the loch of organic carbon of terrestrial origin. The remainder is attributable to inorganic carbon input to the lake via river inflow and derived from prior mineralization of soil organic matter within the drainage area. This annual efflux of CO2 can represent around 6% of net ecosystem production in the catchment.",
author = "Roger Jones and Jonathan Grey and Christopher Quarmby and Darren Sleep",
year = "2001",
month = dec,
doi = "10.1029/2001GB001423",
language = "English",
volume = "15",
pages = "863--870",
journal = "Global Biogeochemical Cycles",
issn = "0886-6236",
publisher = "AMER GEOPHYSICAL UNION",
number = "4",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - Sources and fluxes of inorganic carbon in a deep, oligotrophic lake (Loch Ness, Scotland)

AU - Jones, Roger

AU - Grey, Jonathan

AU - Quarmby, Christopher

AU - Sleep, Darren

PY - 2001/12

Y1 - 2001/12

N2 - The main river inflows to Loch Ness and several depths in the water column within the loch were sampled over an annual cycle. The carbon isotope composition of total dissolved inorganic carbon (DIC) from the samples was determined as well as that of phytoplankton from the loch. Values of δ13C for DIC in the rivers indicated that this DIC was derived from soil respiration in the catchment and achieved only partial equilibrium with the atmosphere during river transport. Riverine loading accounted for most of the DIC in Loch Ness, and the great depth of the loch relative to its surface area allows only limited exchange with the atmosphere. Despite the low productivity in Loch Ness, DIC concentrations in the low alkalinity water are appreciably influenced by plankton metabolism, and seasonal fluctuations in δ13C of DIC and phytoplankton revealed the particular impact of photosynthetic carbon fixation on DIC. However, the photosynthetic depletion of DIC during summer does not offset the riverine loading sufficiently to prevent the loch waters being supersaturated with CO2 throughout the year. Annual efflux of CO2 from Loch Ness is estimated to be 253 × 106 mol yr−1, of which around one quarter may be due to net heterotrophic mineralization within the loch of organic carbon of terrestrial origin. The remainder is attributable to inorganic carbon input to the lake via river inflow and derived from prior mineralization of soil organic matter within the drainage area. This annual efflux of CO2 can represent around 6% of net ecosystem production in the catchment.

AB - The main river inflows to Loch Ness and several depths in the water column within the loch were sampled over an annual cycle. The carbon isotope composition of total dissolved inorganic carbon (DIC) from the samples was determined as well as that of phytoplankton from the loch. Values of δ13C for DIC in the rivers indicated that this DIC was derived from soil respiration in the catchment and achieved only partial equilibrium with the atmosphere during river transport. Riverine loading accounted for most of the DIC in Loch Ness, and the great depth of the loch relative to its surface area allows only limited exchange with the atmosphere. Despite the low productivity in Loch Ness, DIC concentrations in the low alkalinity water are appreciably influenced by plankton metabolism, and seasonal fluctuations in δ13C of DIC and phytoplankton revealed the particular impact of photosynthetic carbon fixation on DIC. However, the photosynthetic depletion of DIC during summer does not offset the riverine loading sufficiently to prevent the loch waters being supersaturated with CO2 throughout the year. Annual efflux of CO2 from Loch Ness is estimated to be 253 × 106 mol yr−1, of which around one quarter may be due to net heterotrophic mineralization within the loch of organic carbon of terrestrial origin. The remainder is attributable to inorganic carbon input to the lake via river inflow and derived from prior mineralization of soil organic matter within the drainage area. This annual efflux of CO2 can represent around 6% of net ecosystem production in the catchment.

U2 - 10.1029/2001GB001423

DO - 10.1029/2001GB001423

M3 - Journal article

VL - 15

SP - 863

EP - 870

JO - Global Biogeochemical Cycles

JF - Global Biogeochemical Cycles

SN - 0886-6236

IS - 4

ER -