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How does a drying Great Salt Lake affect carbon cycling?

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Credit: Pixabay/CC0 Public Domain

As water levels at the lake continue to decline, the complex natural systems the lake supports are shifting, too. Ecohydrologist Erin Rivers from the Quinney College of Natural Resources is investigating how shifting water levels at the Great Salt Lake are altering the way it captures and stores carbon.

The lakebed sprawls across 1,700 square miles of land—so even small tweaks in the chemistry, botany and biology of this system inevitably create exponential impacts, especially if the ecosystem becomes a net source of carbon to the atmosphere.

Lakes generally play an outsized role in carbon cycling, either acting as net sources of carbon or working as carbon sinks (pulling carbon from the atmosphere and storing it in ways that don’t further exacerbate global warming).

Surprisingly little information is known about how a massive, salty body of water like the Great Salt Lake fits into this equation, let alone how that will shift during sustained drought. Rivers is working on research that will give managers a better picture of how the drying lake will impact a drying and warming world.






The lakebed of the Great Salt Lake sprawls across 1,700 square miles of land — so even small tweaks in the chemistry, botany and biology of this system inevitably create exponential impacts, especially if the ecosystem becomes a net source of carbon to the atmosphere. Credit: Utah State University

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Utah State University


Citation:
How does a drying Great Salt Lake affect carbon cycling? (2023, February 14)
retrieved 14 February 2023
from https://phys.org/news/2023-02-drying-great-salt-lake-affect.html

This document is subject to copyright. Apart from any fair dealing for the purpose of private study or research, no
part may be reproduced without the written permission. The content is provided for information purposes only.




great salt lake
Credit: Pixabay/CC0 Public Domain

As water levels at the lake continue to decline, the complex natural systems the lake supports are shifting, too. Ecohydrologist Erin Rivers from the Quinney College of Natural Resources is investigating how shifting water levels at the Great Salt Lake are altering the way it captures and stores carbon.

The lakebed sprawls across 1,700 square miles of land—so even small tweaks in the chemistry, botany and biology of this system inevitably create exponential impacts, especially if the ecosystem becomes a net source of carbon to the atmosphere.

Lakes generally play an outsized role in carbon cycling, either acting as net sources of carbon or working as carbon sinks (pulling carbon from the atmosphere and storing it in ways that don’t further exacerbate global warming).

Surprisingly little information is known about how a massive, salty body of water like the Great Salt Lake fits into this equation, let alone how that will shift during sustained drought. Rivers is working on research that will give managers a better picture of how the drying lake will impact a drying and warming world.






The lakebed of the Great Salt Lake sprawls across 1,700 square miles of land — so even small tweaks in the chemistry, botany and biology of this system inevitably create exponential impacts, especially if the ecosystem becomes a net source of carbon to the atmosphere. Credit: Utah State University

Provided by
Utah State University


Citation:
How does a drying Great Salt Lake affect carbon cycling? (2023, February 14)
retrieved 14 February 2023
from https://phys.org/news/2023-02-drying-great-salt-lake-affect.html

This document is subject to copyright. Apart from any fair dealing for the purpose of private study or research, no
part may be reproduced without the written permission. The content is provided for information purposes only.

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