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Article

Urban landscapes and legacy industry provide hotspots for riverine greenhouse gases: A source-to-sea study of the River Clyde

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Citation

Brown AM, Bass AM, Skiba U, Macdonald JM & Pickard AE (2023) Urban landscapes and legacy industry provide hotspots for riverine greenhouse gases: A source-to-sea study of the River Clyde. Water Research, 236, p. 119969. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.watres.2023.119969

Abstract
There is growing global concern that greenhouse gas (GHG) emissions from water bodies are increasing because of interactions between nutrient levels and climate warming. This paper investigates key land-cover, seasonal and hydrological controls of GHGs by comparison of the semi-natural, agricultural and urban environments in a detailed source-to-sea study of the River Clyde, Scotland. Riverine GHG concentrations were consistently oversaturated with respect to the atmosphere. High riverine concentrations of methane (CH 4) were primarily associated with point source inflows from urban wastewater treatment, abandoned coal mines and lakes, with CH 4-C concentrations between 0.1-44 ?g l 1. Concentrations of carbon dioxide (CO 2) and nitrous oxide (N 2 O) were mainly driven by nitrogen concentrations, dominated by diffuse agricultural inputs in the upper catchment and supplemented by point source inputs from urban wastewater in the lower urban catchment, with CO 2-C concentrations between 0.1-2.6 mg l 1 and N 2 ON concentrations between 0.3-3.4 ?g l 1. A significant and disproportionate increase in all GHGs occurred in the lower urban riverine environment in the summer, compared to the semi-natural environment, where GHG concentrations were higher in winter. This increase and change in GHG seasonal patterns points to anthropogenic impacts on microbial communities. The loss of total dissolved carbon, to the estuary is approximately 48.4 ± 3.6 Gg C yr 1 , with the annual inorganic carbon export approximately double that of organic carbon and four times that of CO 2, with CH 4 accounting for 0.03%, with the anthropogenic impact of disused coal mines accelerating DIC loss. The annual loss of total dissolved nitrogen to the estuary is approximately 4.03 ± 0.38 Gg N yr 1 of which N 2 O represents 0.06%. This study improves our understanding of riverine GHG generation and dynamics which can contribute to our knowledge of their release to the atmosphere. It identifies where action could support reductions in aquatic GHG generation and emission.

Keywords
Methane; Nitrous oxide; Carbon dioxide; Urban wastewater; Agriculture; Mine water

Journal
Water Research: Volume 236

StatusPublished
Funders
Publication date01/06/2023
Publication date online12/04/2023
Date accepted by journal09/04/2023
URL
PublisherElsevier BV
ISSN0043-1354

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Dr Alison Brown

Dr Alison Brown

Research Fellow in Digital Water, Biological and Environmental Sciences

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