Author:
Wilson B. P.,White I.,Melville M. D.
Abstract
A two-year study of the relationships between water chemistry, hydrology and
climatology in areas of acid sulfate soils has demonstrated that discharge of
sulfuric acid to estuaries is not dependent solely on the magnitude of a
rainfall event. Large rain events did not always produce significant changes
to water chemistry, and small rain events could produce large changes if the
prevailing conditions were suitable. The magnitude of changes to estuarine
waters was found to be dependent on the position of the watertable, and
therefore the available soil pore space, and the store of acidic water in
floodgated drains at the time of rainfall. These results have significance for
predicting the discharge of acid drainage to estuarine environments and the
possible impacts on aquatic organisms. A water balance equation, which
estimated acid discharge to surface waters as high as 317 t of
H2SO4 in one month, can be used to
predict monthly discharges for rain events of varying magnitude if prevailing
weather conditions are known.
Subject
Ecology,Aquatic Science,Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics,Oceanography
Cited by
91 articles.
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