Ecosystems

, Volume 4, Issue 6, pp 503–513 | Cite as

Atmospheric Deposition to the Turkey Lakes Watershed: Temporal Variations and Characteristics

  • Alain Sirois
  • Robert Vet
  • David MacTavish

Abstract

We investigated the atmospheric concentrations and deposition fluxes of major ions to the Turkey Lakes Watershed (TLW) between 1980 and 1996. During that time, daily SO42− concentrations in precipitation decreased markedly, while NO3, NH4+, and H+ concentrations remained roughly constant. It appears that precipitation acidity did not decrease in spite of declining SO42− concentrations due to a concurrent and counterbalancing decrease in the concentrations of Ca2+, Mg2+, and K+ in precipitation. The reasons for the decline in base cations are unknown, but this decline is probably related to decreasing emissions of soil-derived particles from agricultural, industrial, and road sources. A similar situation was seen during the same period in other parts of Canada, the eastern United States, and Europe. Wet, dry, and total (wet + dry) deposition fluxes of sulphur (S) and nitrogen (N) were estimated annually for the years 1980–96. The 17-year mean annual total (wet + dry) deposition of S to the watershed was estimated at 38.5 mmol m−2 y−1 (range 24.3–50.3). Total S deposition decreased by 35% from the early 1980s (1982–84) to the mid-1990s (1994–96), a decline consistent with the 23% decline in annual SO2 emissions in eastern North America during the same period. In contrast, the annual total (wet + dry) deposition of oxidized N ranged from 39.8 to 60.4 mmol m−2 y−1, with a 15-year mean of 50.1 mmol m−2 y−1 and a net increase of 10% between the early 1980s (1983–85) and the mid-1990s (1994–96). This is in keeping with a 10% increase in NOx emissions in eastern North America during the same period. For both S and N (oxidized), wet deposition dominated over dry deposition as the major mechanism for atmospheric input to the watershed. Annually, wet deposition accounted for approximately two-thirds of the total atmospheric deposition of both S and N. Dry S deposition was due more to gaseous SO2 deposition (two-thirds of dry S deposition) than to particulate SO42− deposition (one-third of dry S deposition). Dry deposition of oxidized N, however, was dominated (95%) by gaseous HNO3 deposition, with minimal input from particulate NO3 deposition. Compared to several selected watershed/forest sites in Canada, the United States, and Europe, the estimated total deposition of S and N at the TLW was relatively high during the measurement period.

Key words: acid deposition; acid rain; wet deposition; dry deposition; atmospheric loadings; trend analysis; time series analysis. 

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Copyright information

© Springer-Verlag New York Inc. 2001

Authors and Affiliations

  • Alain Sirois
    • 1
  • Robert Vet
    • 1
  • David MacTavish
    • 1
  1. 1.Meteorological Service of Canada, 4905 Dufferin Street, Toronto, Ontario, M3H 5T4, CanadaCA

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