Title of article
Simulation of future stream alkalinity under changing deposition and climate scenarios
Author/Authors
Daniel L. Welsch a، نويسنده , , ?، نويسنده , , B. Jack Cosby b، نويسنده , , George M. Hornberger، نويسنده ,
Issue Information
هفته نامه با شماره پیاپی سال 2006
Pages
11
From page
800
To page
810
Abstract
Models of soil and stream water acidification have typically been applied under scenarios of changing acidic deposition,
however, climate change is usually ignored. Soil air CO2 concentrations have potential to increase as climate warms and becomes
wetter, thus affecting soil and stream water chemistry by initially increasing stream alkalinity at the expense of reducing base
saturation levels on soil exchange sites. We simulate this change by applying a series of physically based coupled models capable
of predicting soil air CO2 and stream water chemistry. We predict daily stream water alkalinity for a small catchment in the Virginia
Blue Ridge for 60 years into the future given stochastically generated daily climate values. This is done for nine different
combinations of climate and deposition. The scenarios for both climate and deposition include a static scenario, a scenario of
gradual change, and a scenario of abrupt change. We find that stream water alkalinity continues to decline for all scenarios (average
decrease of 14.4 μeq L−1) except where climate is gradually warming and becoming more moist (average increase of 13 μeq L−1).
In all other scenarios, base cation removal from catchment soils is responsible for limited alkalinity increase resulting from climate
change. This has implications given the extent that acidification models are used to establish policy and legislation concerning
deposition and emissions.
Keywords
alkalinity , simulation , Climate change , model , Stream
Journal title
Science of the Total Environment
Serial Year
2006
Journal title
Science of the Total Environment
Record number
985882
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