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Dive into the research topics where Christoph Humborg is active.

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Featured researches published by Christoph Humborg.


Nature | 2013

Global carbon dioxide emissions from inland waters

Peter A. Raymond; Jens Hartmann; Ronny Lauerwald; Sebastian Sobek; Cory P. McDonald; Mark Hoover; David Butman; Robert G. Striegl; Emilio Mayorga; Christoph Humborg; Pirkko Kortelainen; Hans H. Dürr; Michel Meybeck; Philippe Ciais; Peter L. Guth

Carbon dioxide (CO2) transfer from inland waters to the atmosphere, known as CO2 evasion, is a component of the global carbon cycle. Global estimates of CO2 evasion have been hampered, however, by the lack of a framework for estimating the inland water surface area and gas transfer velocity and by the absence of a global CO2 database. Here we report regional variations in global inland water surface area, dissolved CO2 and gas transfer velocity. We obtain global CO2 evasion rates of 1.8  petagrams of carbon (Pg C) per year from streams and rivers and 0.32  Pg C yr−1 from lakes and reservoirs, where the upper and lower limits are respectively the 5th and 95th confidence interval percentiles. The resulting global evasion rate of 2.1 Pg C yr−1 is higher than previous estimates owing to a larger stream and river evasion rate. Our analysis predicts global hotspots in stream and river evasion, with about 70 per cent of the flux occurring over just 20 per cent of the land surface. The source of inland water CO2 is still not known with certainty and new studies are needed to research the mechanisms controlling CO2 evasion globally.


AMBIO: A Journal of the Human Environment | 2000

Silicon Retention in River Basins: Far-reaching Effects on Biogeochemistry and Aquatic Food Webs in Coastal Marine Environments

Christoph Humborg; Daniel J. Conley; Lars Rahm; Fredrik Wulff; Adriana Cociasu; Venugopalan Ittekkot

Abstract Regulation of rivers by damming as well as eutrophication in river basins has substantially reduced dissolved silicon (DSi) loads to the Black Sea and the Baltic Sea. Whereas removal of N and P in lakes and reservoirs can be compensated for by anthropogenic inputs in the drainage basins, no such compensation occurs for DSi. The resulting changes in the nutrient composition (DSi:N:P ratio) of river discharges seem to be responsible for dramatic shifts in phytoplankton species composition in the Black Sea. In the Baltic Sea, DSi concentrations and the DSi:N ratio have been decreasing since the end of the 1960s, and there are indications that the proportion of diatoms in the spring bloom has decreased while flagellates have increased. The effects on coastal biogeochemical cycles and food web structure observed in the Black Sea and the Baltic Sea may be far reaching, because it appears that the reductions in DSi delivery by rivers are probably occurring worldwide with the ever increasing construction of dams for flow regulation.


Environmental Science & Technology | 2011

Hypoxia Is Increasing in the Coastal Zone of the Baltic Sea

Daniel J. Conley; Jacob Carstensen; Juris Aigars; Philip Axe; Erik Bonsdorff; Tatjana Eremina; Britt-Marie Haahti; Christoph Humborg; Per R. Jonsson; Jonne Kotta; Christer Lannegren; Ulf Larsson; Miguel Rodriguez Medina; Elzbieta Lysiak-Pastuszak; Nijole Remeikaite-Nikiene; Jakob Walve; Sunhild Wilhelms; Lovisa Zillén

Hypoxia is a well-described phenomenon in the offshore waters of the Baltic Sea with both the spatial extent and intensity of hypoxia known to have increased due to anthropogenic eutrophication, however, an unknown amount of hypoxia is present in the coastal zone. Here we report on the widespread unprecedented occurrence of hypoxia across the coastal zone of the Baltic Sea. We have identified 115 sites that have experienced hypoxia during the period 1955–2009 increasing the global total to ca. 500 sites, with the Baltic Sea coastal zone containing over 20% of all known sites worldwide. Most sites experienced episodic hypoxia, which is a precursor to development of seasonal hypoxia. The Baltic Sea coastal zone displays an alarming trend with hypoxia steadily increasing with time since the 1950s effecting nutrient biogeochemical processes, ecosystem services, and coastal habitat.


Frontiers in Ecology and the Environment | 2012

Nitrogen fluxes from the landscape are controlled by net anthropogenic nitrogen inputs and by climate

Robert W. Howarth; Dennis P. Swaney; Gilles Billen; Josette Garnier; Bongghi Hong; Christoph Humborg; Penny J Johnes; Carl-Magnus Mörth; Roxanne Marino

The flux of nitrogen (N) to coastal marine ecosystems is strongly correlated with the “net anthropogenic nitrogen inputs” (NANI) to the landscape across 154 watersheds, ranging in size from 16 km2 to 279 000 km2, in the US and Europe. When NANI values are greater than 1070 kg N km−2 yr−1, an average of 25% of the NANI is exported from those watersheds in rivers. Our analysis suggests a possible threshold at lower NANI levels, with a smaller fraction exported when NANI values are below 1070 kg N km−2 yr−1. Synthetic fertilizer is the largest component of NANI in many watersheds, but other inputs also contribute substantially to the N fluxes; in some regions, atmospheric deposition of N is the major component. The flux of N to coastal areas is controlled in part by climate, and a higher percentage of NANI is exported in rivers, from watersheds that have higher freshwater discharge.


Marine Pollution Bulletin | 1996

Long-term ecological changes in Romanian coastal Waters of the Black Sea

Adriana Cociasu; Liliana Dorogan; Christoph Humborg; Luci Popa

Abstract Measurements of inorganic nutrients, phytoplankton cell densities and benthos biomass were carried out at different stations off Constanta, on the Romanian shelf and in the Danube River by the Romanian Institute of Marine Research between 1959 and 1992. Measurements in the Sulina branch of the Danube reveal that there was a five- and two-fold increase, respectively, of the total inorganic nitrogen and phosphate loads of the Danube River, whereas the riverine input of silicate decreased to about one-third. In addition, industrial waste waters contribute to this input—especially phosphate. Distinct increases of phytoplankton cell densities, as well as the frequency of algal blooms, were reported. There was a more than double decrease of benthic biomass in the Romanian shelf area due to suboxia in the bottom water after the sedimentation of algal blooms.


Global Biogeochemical Cycles | 2010

Nonconservative behavior of dissolved organic carbon across the Laptev and East Siberian seas

Vanja Alling; Laura Sanchez-Garcia; Don Porcelli; S. M. Pugach; Jorien E. Vonk; Bart E. van Dongen; Carl Magnus Mörth; Leif G. Anderson; Alexander Sokolov; Per Andersson; Christoph Humborg; Igor Semiletov; Örjan Gustafsson

Climate change is expected to have a strong effect on the Eastern Siberian Arctic Shelf (ESAS) region, which includes 40% of the Arctic shelves and comprises the Laptev and East Siberian seas. The ...


AMBIO: A Journal of the Human Environment | 2007

Management Options and Effects on a Marine Ecosystem: Assessing the Future of the Baltic

Fredrik Wulff; Oleg P. Savchuk; Alexander Sokolov; Christoph Humborg; Carl-Magnus Mörth

Abstract We are using the coupled models in a decision support system, Nest, to evaluate the response of the marine ecosystem to changes in external loads through various management options. The models address all the seven major marine basins and the entire drainage basin of the Baltic Sea. A series of future scenarios have been developed, in close collaboration with the Helsinki Commission, to see the possible effects of improved wastewater treatment and manure handling, phosphorus-free detergents, and less intensive land use and live stocks. Improved wastewater treatment and the use of phosphorus-free detergents in the entire region would drastically decrease phosphorus loads and improve the marine environment, particularly the occurrence of cyanobacterial blooms. However, the Baltic Sea will remain eutrophic, and to reduce other effects, a substantial reduction of nitrogen emissions must be implemented. This can only be obtained in these scenarios by drastically changing land use. In a final scenario, we have turned 50% of all agricultural lands into grasslands, together with efficient wastewater treatments and a ban of phosphorus in detergents. This scenario will substantially reduce primary production and the extension of hypoxic bottoms, increase water transparency in the most eutrophied basins, and virtually eliminate extensive cyanobacterial blooms.


Global Biogeochemical Cycles | 2002

Hydrological alterations with river damming in northern Sweden: Implications for weathering and river biogeochemistry

Christoph Humborg; Sven Blomqvist; Ellinor Avsan; Yvonne Bergensund; Erik Smedberg; Jenni Brink; Carl-Magnus Mörth

Hydrological alterations with river damming in northern Sweden : Implications for weathering and river biogeochemistry


Tellus B | 2012

Future changes in the Baltic Sea acid-base (pH) and oxygen balances

Anders Omstedt; Moa Edman; Björn Claremar; Peter Frodin; Erik Gustafsson; Christoph Humborg; Hanna Eriksson Hägg; Magnus Mörth; Anna Rutgersson; Guy Schurgers; Benjamin Smith; Teresia Wällstedt; Alla Yurova

ABSTRACT Possible future changes in Baltic Sea acid–base (pH) and oxygen balances were studied using a catchment–sea coupled model system and numerical experiments based on meteorological and hydrological forcing datasets and scenarios. By using objective statistical methods, climate runs for present climate conditions were examined and evaluated using Baltic Sea modelling. The results indicate that increased nutrient loads will not inhibit future Baltic Sea acidification; instead, the seasonal pH cycle will be amplified by increased biological production and mineralization. All examined scenarios indicate future acidification of the whole Baltic Sea that is insensitive to the chosen global climate model. The main factor controlling the direction and magnitude of future pH changes is atmospheric CO2 concentration (i.e. emissions). Climate change and land-derived changes (e.g. nutrient loads) affect acidification mainly by altering the seasonal cycle and deep-water conditions. Apart from decreasing pH, we also project a decreased saturation state of calcium carbonate, decreased respiration index and increasing hypoxic area – all factors that will threaten the marine ecosystem. We demonstrate that substantial reductions in fossil-fuel burning are needed to minimise the coming pH decrease and that substantial reductions in nutrient loads are needed to reduce the coming increase in hypoxic and anoxic waters.


Marine Pollution Bulletin | 2008

Nutrient budgets for European seas: A measure of the effectiveness of nutrient reduction policies

Yuri Artioli; Jana Friedrich; Alison J. Gilbert; Abigail McQuatters-Gollop; Laurence Mee; Jan E. Vermaat; Fred Wulff; Christoph Humborg; Luca Palmeri; Falk Pollehne

Socio-economic development in Europe has exerted increasing pressure on the marine environment. Eutrophication, caused by nutrient enrichment, is evident in regions of all European seas. Its severity varies but has, in places, adversely impacted socio-economic activities. This paper aims to evaluate the effectiveness of recently adopted policies to reduce anthropogenic nutrient inputs to European seas. Nitrogen and phosphorus budgets were constructed for three different periods (prior to severe eutrophication, during severe eutrophication and contemporary) to capture changes in the relative importance of different nutrient sources in four European seas suffering from eutrophication (Baltic Proper, coastal North Sea, Northern Adriatic and North-Western Black Sea Shelf). Policy success is evident for point sources, notably for P in the Baltic and North Seas, but reduction of diffuse sources has been more problematic.

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