The Courier & Advertiser (Angus and Dundee)

Glaciers threaten faster carbon output

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Melting glaciers could speed up carbon emissions into the atmosphere, a new study suggests.

The loss of glaciers worldwide enhances the breakdown of complex carbon molecules in rivers, potentiall­y contributi­ng further to climate change, research indicates.

Scientists say that for the first time they have linked glacier-fed mountain rivers with higher rates of plant material decomposit­ion, a major process in the global carbon cycle.

As mountain glaciers melt, water runs into rivers downstream.

But with global warming accelerati­ng the loss of glaciers, rivers have warmer water temperatur­es and are less prone to variable water flow and sediment movement.

According to the research led by Leeds University, these conditions are much more favourable for fungi to establish and grow.

The fungi living in these rivers decompose organic matter such as plant leaves and wood, eventually leading to the release of carbon dioxide into the air.

This process has been measured in 57 rivers in six mountain ranges across the world, in Austria, Ecuador, France, New Zealand, Norway and the United States.

Lead author Sarah Fell, of Leeds’ School of Geography and water@ leeds, said: “We found increases in the rate of organic matter decomposit­ion in mountain rivers, which can then be expected to lead to more carbon release to the atmosphere.

“This is an unexpected form of climate feedback, whereby warming drives glacier loss, which in turn rapidly recycles carbon in rivers before it is returned to the atmosphere.”

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