Spatially resolved soil solution chemistry in a central European atmospherically polluted high-elevation catchment
Author:
Petrash Daniel A.ORCID, Buzek Frantisek, Novak Martin, Cejkova BohuslavaORCID, Kram Pavel, Chuman Tomas, Curik Jan, Veselovsky Frantisek, Stepanova Marketa, Myska Oldrich, Holeckova Pavla, Bohdalkova Leona
Abstract
Abstract. We collected soil solutions by suction lysimeters in a
central European temperate forest with a history of acidification-related
spruce die-back in order to interpret spatial patterns of soil nutrient
partitioning, compare them with stream water chemistry and evaluate these
parameters relative to concurrent loads of anions and cations in
precipitation. Five lysimeter nests were installed in the 33 ha U dvou
loucek (UDL) mountain catchment at different topographic positions
(hilltops, slopes and valley). Following equilibration, monthly soil
solution samples were interrogated over a 2-year period with regard to their
SO42-, NO3-, NH4+, Na+, K+, Ca2+,
Mg2+ and total dissolved Al concentrations, organic carbon (DOC) and
pH. Soil pits were excavated in the vicinity of each lysimeter nest to also
constrain soil chemistry. For an estimation of phosphorus (P) availability,
ammonium oxalate extraction of soil samples was performed. Cation exchange
capacity (CEC ≤58 meq kg−1) and base saturation (BS ≤13 %) were found to be significantly lower at UDL than in other monitored
central European small catchments areas. Spatial trends and seasonality in
soil solution chemistry support belowground inputs from mineral-stabilized
legacy pollutants. Overall, the soil solution data suggest that the
ecosystem was still chemically out of balance relative to the concurrent
loads of anions and cations in precipitation, documenting incomplete
recovery from acidification. Nearly 30 years after peak acidification, UDL
exhibited similar soil solution concentrations of SO42, Ca2+ and Mg2+ as median values at the Pan-European International
Co-operative Program (ICP) Forest sites with similar bedrock lithology and
vegetation cover, yet NO3- concentrations were an order of
magnitude higher. When concentrations of SO42-, NO3- and
base cations in runoff are compared to soil pore waters, higher
concentration in runoff points to lateral surficial leaching of pollutants
and nutrients in excess than from topsoil to subsoil. With P availability
being below the lowest range observed in soil plots from the Czech Republic,
the managed forest ecosystem in UDL probably reflects growing inputs of C
from regenerating vegetation in the N-saturated soil, which leads to P
depletion in the soil. In addition, the observed spatial variability
provides evidence pointing to substrate variability, C and P
bioavailability, and landscape as major controls over base metal leaching
toward the subsoil level in N-saturated catchments.
Publisher
Copernicus GmbH
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