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Erik Smedberg
GIS
Stockholm Resilience Centre
Stockholm University
Phone +46 73 707 85 96
E-mail erik@mbox.su.se

Visiting address
Stockholm Resilience Centre
Stockholm University
Kräftriket 10 STALLET
S-106 91  STOCKHOLM

Adress
Stockholm Resilience Centre
Stockholm University
S-106 91  STOCKHOLM
SWEDEN

I have a PhD from the Department of Applied Environmental Science, Stockholm University, 2008 and I am presently working with GIS data for watershed modelling.

My research interests are:

  • Hydrological modelling in watersheds
  • Effects of land change on land-sea nutrient fluxes

Selected publications:
Modelling hydrology and silicon-carbon interactions in taiga and tundra biomes from a landscape perspective: Implications for global warming feedbacks, Smedberg, E., Mörth, C-M., Swaney, D.P., Humborg, C., Global Biogeochemical Cycles vol. 20, doi: 10.1029/2005GB002567, 2006

 
We used a simple hydrological-biogeochemical mixing model to the hypothesis that export of total organic carbon occurring mainly during spring in taiga and tundra watersheds might be compensated by production and export of bicarbonate (HCO3-) from groundwater during the rest of the year. The investigated watersheds are located in northern Sweden close to the Arctic Circle . An elevated spring flow peak due to snowmelt characterizes the hydrology of boreal and arctic river systems. During this snowmelt, total organic carbon (TOC) previously stored as soil carbon, is flushed and exported from the watersheds, and can be released to the atmosphere via hetereotrophic remineralization during riverine transport to the sea, thereby contributing to atmospheric CO2. The TOC yields of the watersheds investigated increased with vegetation and peat cover and ranged across watersheds from 0.5 to 2.8 tons km-2 yr-1. During frozen periods, streamflow is dominated by “old" groundwater. This water has percolated through the soils and is rich in DSi and bicarbonate; that is, atmospheric carbon that has been “consumed" in chemical weathering processes is partly exported as bicarbonate to the sea, where carbon is stored as CaCo3 for geological time. The bicarbonate export of the watersheds investigated was between 0.4 and 1.2 tons C km-2 yr-1 corresponding to 15-73% of the TOC export. Very likely, global warming will affect water flow through the soils in taiga and tundra ecosystems and thus will have an effect on watershed carbon budgets. This bicarbonate export may compensate for significant amounts of the exported TOC, thereby reducing the positive feedback to atmospheric CO2.

Baltic Nest Institute Sweden | Stockholm Resilience Centre | Stockholm University | SE-106 91 Stockholm, Sweden | Telephone:  +46 (0)8 674 7070
Baltic Nest Institute Denmark | Aarhus University | Fredriksborgsvej 399 | DK-4000 Roskilde, Denmark | Telephone:  +45 4630 1200