05 June 2025

Watercourses release soil carbon that can be thousands of years old into the atmosphere. This runs counter to the prevailing view that it is mainly carbon from newly decomposed organic material that is released from watercourses. A new study published in Nature details the recent findings.

River in the mountains.
A new study published in Nature show that watercourses release soil carbon that can be thousands of years old into the atmosphere.   Photographer: Jack Anstey/Unsplash

The researchers have investigated watercourses, such as rivers and streams, where carbon dioxide and methane are dissolved and can be released into the atmosphere.

David Bastviken.
David Bastviken, professor at LiU. Photographer: Charlotte Perhammar
“The study provides a new understanding of the Earth’s carbon flows and the soil’s ability for long-term carbon storage. If organic matter in these thousand-year-old carbon stores is broken down and released via rivers, it shows that old soil carbon is less stable and more mobile than we previously thought,” says David Bastviken, professor at the Department of Thematic Studies, Environmental Change, at Linköping University (LiU).

The study was led by researchers at the University of Bristol, UK, in collaboration with, among others, the Swedish University of Agricultural Sciences (SLU) and LiU.

Half of the carbon is very old

Previously, it was assumed that watercourse carbon dioxide emissions mainly came from, for example, plants decomposing over the past 50–100 years. Older carbon stores have previously been considered to be more stably deposited in the soil.

Portrait Marcus Wallin.
Marcus Wallin, researcher at SLU. Photographer: Ulrika Jansson Klintberg/SLU
But the new study gives a completely different picture – about 60 per cent of the carbon dioxide and methane emissions from watercourse surfaces come from older carbon stores that have been formed over a very long time.

“What we now know is that half of the carbon emitted is very old – in some cases it was absorbed from the atmosphere thousands of years ago, or even earlier! We had not expected it to be that old, let alone that old carbon would make up such a large proportion of what is emitted from watercourses,” says Marcus Wallin, researcher at the Department of Aquatic Sciences and Assessment at SLU, in Uppsala.

Impact on future climate models

The research team has investigated over 700 watercourses in 26 different countries worldwide. They have made a detailed summary of the age of the carbon dioxide and methane emitted. By comparing measured levels of carbon-14 in watercourses with a standard reference for current atmospheric carbon dioxide, the researchers were able to date carbon dioxide and methane emissions.

“The carbon is transported from land to watercourses and then back to the atmosphere. We don’t yet know how humans affect this flow of old carbon,” says lead author Josh Dean, a researcher at the University of Bristol.

Watercourses emit carbon into the atmosphere corresponding to about two gigatonnes per year This compares with emissions from human activity, which amount to between 10 and 15 gigatonnes annually. The emissions from watercourses are therefore significant at a global level. The researchers now plan to build on the results by investigating how the age of these emissions may have changed over time.

“The results can change our understanding of how future climate models should be designed,” says Marcus Wallin.

Article: , Joshua F. Dean, Gemma Coxon, Yanchen Zheng, Jack Bishop, Mark H. Garnett, David Bastviken, Valier Galy, Robert G. M. Spencer, Suzanne E. Tank, Edward T. Tipper, Jorien E. Vonk, Marcus B. Wallin, Liwei Zhang, Chris D. Evans & Robert G. Hilton, Nature volume 642, pages105–111 (2025), published online 4 June 2025. DOI: 10.1038/s41586-025-09023-w

The Swedish text was originally published as a press release from SLU.

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