Simulation of the long-term soil response to acid deposition in various buffer ranges |
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Authors: | W. De Vries M. Posch J. Kämäri |
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Affiliation: | 1. The Winand Staring Centre for Integrated Land, Soil and Water Research, P.O. Box 125, NL-6700, AC Wageningen, The Netherlands 2. International Institute for Applied Systems Analysis, A-2361, Laxenburg, Austria 3. Water and Environment Research Institute, P.O. Box 250, SF-00101, Helsinki, Finland
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Abstract: | A soil acidification model has been developed to estimate long-term chemical changes in soil and soil water in response to changes in atmospheric deposition. Its major outputs include base saturation, pH and the molar Al/BC ratio, where BC stands for divalent base cations. Apart from net uptake and net immobilization of N, the processes accounted for are restricted to geochemical interactions, including weathering of carbonates, silicates and Al oxides and hydroxides, cation exchange and CO2 equilibriums. First, the model's behavior in the different buffer ranges between pH 7 and pH 3 is evaluated by analyzing the response of an initially calcareous soil of 50 cm depth to a constant high acid load (5000 molc ha?1 yr?1) over a period of 500 yr. In calcareous soils weathering is fast and the pH remains high (near 7) until the carbonates are exhausted. Results indicate a time lag of about 100 yr for each percent CaCO3 before the pH starts to drop. In non-calcareous soils the response in the range between pH 7 and 4 mainly depends on the initial amount of exchangeable base cations. A decrease in base saturation by H/BC exchange and Al/BC exchange following dissolution of Al3+ leads to a strong increase in the Al/BC ratio near pH 4. A further decrease in pH to values near 3.0 does occur when the A1 oxides and/or hydroxides are exhausted. The analyses show that this could occur in acid soils within several decades. The buffer mechanisms in the various pH ranges are discussed in relation to Ulrich's concept of buffer ranges. Secondly, the impact of various deposition scenarios on non-calcareous soils is analyzed for a time period of 100 yr. The results indicate that the time lag between reductions in deposition and a decrease in the Al/BC ratio is short. However, substantial reductions up to a final deposition level of 1000 molc ha?1 yr?1 are needed to get Al/BC ratios below a critical value of 1.0. |
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