Drivers and evolution of episodic acidification at the Bear Brook Watershed in Maine, USA
- 11 June 2010
- journal article
- research article
- Published by Springer Nature in Environmental Monitoring and Assessment
- Vol. 171 (1-4) , 59-69
- https://doi.org/10.1007/s10661-010-1526-0
Abstract
Despite decades of research about episodic acidification in many regions of the world, the understanding of what controls the transient changes in stream water chemistry occurring during rain and snow melt events is still limited. Here, we use 20 years of hydrological and stream chemical data from the paired watershed study at Bear Brook Watershed in Maine (BBWM), USA to improve the understanding of the effects of acid deposition on the causes, drivers, and evolution of episodic acidification. The long-term experimental study at BBWM includes 18 years of chemical treatment of the West Bear Brook (WB) watershed with (NH4)2SO4. East Bear Brook (EB) serves as reference. The treatment started in 1989 following a 2-year pretreatment period. We analyzed 212 hydrological episodes using an episode model that can separate and quantify individual drivers of the transient change in acid-neutralizing capacity (ANC) during hydrological events. The results suggest that 18 years of N and S addition have not affected the natural drivers of episodic acidification of base-cation dilution, marine sea salt episodes, or organic acidity during rain and snow melt events. The contribution of SO $_{4}^{2-}$ to the ANC decline in WB has been increasing linearly since the beginning of watershed treatment, while the role of NO $_{3}^{-}$ has remained relatively constant after an initial increase. This is contradictory to many previous shorter-term studies and illustrates the need for a more mechanistic understanding of the causes and drivers of episodic acidification during rain- and snow melt-driven hydrological events.
Keywords
This publication has 48 references indexed in Scilit:
- Twenty-year inter-annual trends and seasonal variations in precipitation and stream water chemistry at the Bear Brook Watershed in Maine, USAEnvironmental Monitoring and Assessment, 2010
- Factors controlling soil water and stream water aluminum concentrations after a clearcut in a forested watershed with calcium-poor soilsBiogeochemistry, 2007
- Drought-induced sulphate release from a wetland in south-central OntarioEnvironmental Monitoring and Assessment, 2006
- Soil Freezing and the Acid‐Base Chemistry of Soil Solutions in a Northern Hardwood ForestSoil Science Society of America Journal, 2003
- Long-term response in episodic acidification to declining SO42– deposition in two streams in Nova ScotiaHydrology and Earth System Sciences, 2002
- Power of the Mann–Kendall and Spearman's rho tests for detecting monotonic trends in hydrological seriesPublished by Elsevier ,2001
- Randomized intervention analysis of the response of the West Bear Brook Watershed, Maine to chemical manipulationWater, Air, & Soil Pollution, 1995
- Underestimation of dry deposition by throughfall in mixed northern hardwood forestsJournal of Hydrology, 1994
- Influence of organic acids on the pH and acid‐neutralizing capacity of Adirondack LakesWater Resources Research, 1993
- Episodic stream acidification caused by atmospheric deposition of sea salts at Acadia National Park, Maine, United StatesWater Resources Research, 1992