Title of article :
Comparative field study on precipitation, throughfall, stemflow,
fog water, and atmospheric aerosol and gases at
urban and rural sites in Japan
Author/Authors :
Masahide Aikawa، نويسنده , , *، نويسنده , , Takatoshi Hiraki، نويسنده , , Motonori Tamaki، نويسنده ,
Issue Information :
هفته نامه با شماره پیاپی سال 2006
Abstract :
Precipitation collected by a wet-only sampler (WP), precipitation collected by a filtering-type bulk sampler (BP), throughfall
(TF), stemflow (SF), fog water (FW), and atmospheric aerosol and gases were collected at two sites with different site
classifications: an urban site (Mt. Rokko) and a rural site (Mt. Awaga) to investigate canopy–atmosphere interactions and to
study the chemistry of precipitation in forested areas located in different atmospheric conditions. Compared to those at the rural
site, the monthly volume-weighted pH values at the urban site were not significantly ( p N0.05) different for WP, higher
( p b0.05) for BP, not significantly ( p N 0.05) different for TF, lower ( p b0.01) for SF, and lower ( p b0.01) for FW. The order
of mean pH values at the urban site was FWbSFbWPbTFbBP. In contrast, the order at the rural site was
FWbSFbBPbWPbTF. Concentrations of chemical species at the urban site were higher than those at the rural site in all
samples and all chemical species. In particular, higher NO3
concentrations at the urban site were observed in all samples. The
amount of dry deposition on leaves at the urban site was approximately 1.17 times larger than that at the rural site. The monthly
net TF (=TF BP) in autumn seemed to be larger than that in summer; this trend was remarkable in K+. The monthly NO3
deposition in the net TF was larger at the urban site than at other parameters and at the rural site. The concentrations of chemical
species in aerosol and gases that were measured near the central part of Kobe City were ca. 3.4 times higher than those in the
rural area. Mt. Rokko borders the central part of the city, which caused the concentrations at Mt. Rokko to be higher than those
at Mt. Awaga. The deposition amounts at Mt. Rokko were larger than those at Mt. Awaga, which probably can be attributed to
the higher concentrations of chemical species in atmospheric aerosol and gases.
Keywords :
Gas , Bulk , Stemflow , Fog water , Wet-only , aerosol , Site classification , Throughfall
Journal title :
Science of the Total Environment
Journal title :
Science of the Total Environment