Sulphate leaching from diffuse agricultural and forest sources in a large central European catchment during 1900-2010
Language English Country Netherlands Media print-electronic
Document type Journal Article, Research Support, Non-U.S. Gov't
PubMed
24176702
DOI
10.1016/j.scitotenv.2013.10.013
PII: S0048-9697(13)01157-1
Knihovny.cz E-resources
- Keywords
- Diffuse sources, Modelling, Sulphate leaching, Sulphur mineralization,
- MeSH
- Water Pollutants, Chemical analysis MeSH
- Models, Chemical * MeSH
- Water Pollution, Chemical statistics & numerical data MeSH
- Environmental Monitoring * MeSH
- Rivers chemistry MeSH
- Sulfates analysis MeSH
- Trees MeSH
- Agriculture MeSH
- Publication type
- Journal Article MeSH
- Research Support, Non-U.S. Gov't MeSH
- Geographicals
- Czech Republic MeSH
- Names of Substances
- Water Pollutants, Chemical MeSH
- Sulfates MeSH
Using dynamic, mass budget, and empirical models, we quantified sulphate-sulphur (SO4-S) leaching from soils in a large central European catchment (upper Vltava river, Czech Republic) over a 110-year period (1900-2010). SO4-S inputs to soils with synthetic fertilisers and atmospheric deposition increased in the 1950s-1980s, then rapidly decreased (~80%), and remained low since the middle 1990s. The proportion of drained agricultural land rapidly increased from 4 to 43% between the 1950s and 1990s; then the draining ability of the system slowly decreased due to its ageing. Sulphate concentrations in the Vltava exhibited similar trends as the external SO4-S inputs, suggesting that they could be explained by changes in atmospheric and fertiliser S inputs. The available data and modelling, however, showed that (i) internal SO4-S sources (mineralization of soil organic S in the drained agricultural land), (ii) a hysteresis in SO4-S leaching from forest soils (a net S retention at the high S inputs and then a net release at the lowered inputs), and (iii) hydrology must be taken into account. An empirical model was then employed, based on parameters representing hydrology (discharge), external SO4-S sources (inputs by synthetic fertilisers and atmospheric deposition), and internal SO4-S sources (mineralization related to soil drainage). The model explained 84% of the observed variability in annual SO4-S concentrations in the Vltava river during 1900-2010 and showed that forest soils were a net sink (105 kg ha(-1)) while agricultural land was a net source (55 kg ha(-1)) of SO4-S during 1960-2010. In the late 1980s, forest soils changed from a sink to a source of S, and the present release of SO4-S accumulated in forest soils thus delays recovery of surface waters from acidification, while S losses from agricultural soils increase the risk of future S deficiency in S-demanding crops.
Biology Centre AS CR Institute of Hydrobiology Na Sádkách 7 37005 České Budějovice Czech Republic
Coordination Centre for Effects RIVM P O Box 1 NL 3720 BA Bilthoven The Netherlands
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