Author/Authors :
Heather V. Goss، نويسنده , , Stephen A. Norton، نويسنده ,
Abstract :
We experimentally acidified three low alkalinity first-order streams in forested catchments
in Maine, USA. We evaluated water samples from a reference site above the point of
hydrochloric acid addition and from two or three sites located 16 to 94 m downstream.
Neutralization included protonation of weak acids, adsorption of sulfate, and ion exchange
of base cations and aluminum (Al) for protons (H+). Protonation of bicarbonate was
significant in the relatively high pH Hadlock Brook. Protonation of weak organic acids
dominated in the high dissolved organic carbon (DOC) Mud Pond Inlet. The response in low
DOC, low pH East Bear Brook was dominated by stream substrate release of cations. East
Bear Brook had the strongest acid neutralization response per unit catchment area.
In all streams, exchangeable calcium (Ca) andmagnesium (Mg) were mobilized, with CaNMg. Al
was also mobilized. During initial stages of acidification, Ca desorbed preferentially, whereas Al
mobilization dominated later. Early in the recovery, adsorption of Ca to the streambed sediments
was kinetically favored over adsorption of Al. Though pH increased downstream of acid addition,
the streams remained undersaturated with respect to amorphous Al(OH)3, so Al did not
precipitate. In East Bear Brook, however,Al left solution further downstreamthrough adsorption.
This process was likely kinetically controlled, because it occurred in East Bear Brook (3–4 L/s) but
did not occur in Hadlock Brook (ca. 40 L/s) or Mud Pond Inlet (ca. 60 L/s).
During experimental acidification, the initial Al:Ca ratio of a streamʹs response may indicate
the acidification status of the catchment. Short-term stream acidification experiments
illuminate processes characteristic of episodic stream acidification and of long-term
catchment acidification. East Bear Brook and Hadlock Brook catchments are in early to
intermediate stages of acidification. The Mud Pond Inlet catchment (high Al:Ca ratio) is in a
later stage of acidification.