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Cory P. McDonald
Researcher at Michigan Technological University
Publications - 25
Citations - 2730
Cory P. McDonald is an academic researcher from Michigan Technological University. The author has contributed to research in topics: Carbon dioxide & Carbon cycle. The author has an hindex of 13, co-authored 22 publications receiving 2085 citations. Previous affiliations of Cory P. McDonald include Wisconsin Department of Natural Resources & Marquette University.
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Journal ArticleDOI
Global carbon dioxide emissions from inland waters
Peter A. Raymond,Jens Hartmann,Ronny Lauerwald,Ronny Lauerwald,Sebastian Sobek,Cory P. McDonald,Mark Hoover,David Butman,David Butman,Robert G. Striegl,Emilio Mayorga,Christoph Humborg,Pirkko Kortelainen,Hans H. Dürr,Michel Meybeck,Philippe Ciais,Peter L. Guth +16 more
TL;DR: In this article, the authors report regional variations in global inland water surface area, dissolved CO2 and gas transfer velocity, and obtain global CO2 evasion rates of 1.8(-0.25) and 0.52 Pg C yr(-1) from lakes and reservoirs, where the upper and lower limits are respectively the 5th and 95th confidence interval percentiles.
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Carbon dioxide and methane emissions from the Yukon River system
TL;DR: In this paper, the authors couple measurements of aqueous CO2 and CH4 partial pressures (pCO2, pCH4) and flux across the water-air interface with gas transfer models to calculate subbasin distributions of gas flux density.
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Aquatic carbon cycling in the conterminous United States and implications for terrestrial carbon accounting
David Butman,David Butman,Sarah M. Stackpoole,Edward G. Stets,Cory P. McDonald,David W. Clow,Robert G. Striegl +6 more
TL;DR: It is shown that aquatic ecosystems in the conterminous United States export over 100 teragrams of carbon (TgC) per year, highlighting the need to attribute the sources of aquatic carbon more accurately, and asserted that inland waters play an important role in carbon accounting.
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Inorganic carbon loading as a primary driver of dissolved carbon dioxide concentrations in the lakes and reservoirs of the contiguous United States
Cory P. McDonald,Cory P. McDonald,Edward G. Stets,Robert G. Striegl,David Butman,David Butman +5 more
TL;DR: In this paper, the authors performed a spatially comprehensive analysis of CO2 concentration and air-water fluxes in lakes and reservoirs of the contiguous United States using large, consistent data sets, and modeled the relative contribution of inorganic and organic carbon loading to vertical CO2 fluxes.
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The regional abundance and size distribution of lakes and reservoirs in the United States and implications for estimates of global lake extent
TL;DR: This article analyzed complete geospatial data for the 3.5 million lakes and reservoirs larger than 0.001 km2 in the contiguous United States (excluding the Laurentian Great Lakes) and identified their regional distribution characteristics.