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Acidic deposition,ecosystem processes,and nitrogen saturation in a high elevation Southern Appalachian watershed
Authors:S C Nodvin  H Van Miegroet  S E Lindberg  N S Nicholas  D W Johnson
Institution:1. National Biological Service and Graduate Faculty of Ecology and Evolutionary Biology (GFEBB), The University of Tennessee, 37996-1610, Knoxville, Tennessee, USA
2. Forest Resources Department, Utah State University, 84322-2455, Logan, UT, USA
3. Graduate Faculty in Ecology GFEBB and Environmental Sciences Division, Oak Ridge National Laboratory, 37831, Oak Ridge, TN, USA
4. Tennessee Valley Authority, 37828-2001, Norris, TN, USA
5. Desert Research Institute, University of Nevada, 89506, Reno, NV, USA
Abstract:High-elevation red spruce-Fraser fir forests in the Southern Appalachian mountains: 1) receive among the highest rates of atmospheric deposition measured in North America, 2) contain old-growth forests, 3) have shown declines in forest health, 4) have sustained high insect-caused fir mortality, and 5) contain poorly buffered soils and stream systems. High rates of nitrogen and sulphur deposition (sim1900 and sim2200 Eq·ha–1·yr–1, respectively) are dominated by dry and cloud deposition processes. Large leaching fluxes of nitrate-nitrogen (100–1400 Eq·ha–1·yr–1) occur within the soil profile. We have expanded the study to the watershed scale with monitoring of: precipitation, throughfall, stream hydrology, and stream chemistry. Two streamlets drain the 17.4 ha Noland Divide Watershed (1676–1920m) located in the Great Smoky Mountains National Park. A network of 50 20x20 m plots is being used to assess stand structure, biomass, and soil nutrient pools. Nitrate is the predominant anion in the streamlets (weighted concentrations: 47 and 54 mgreq·L–1 NO3 ; 31 and 43 mgreq·L–1 SO4 2–). Watershed nitrate export is extremely high (sim1000 Eq·ha–1 yr–1), facilitating significant base cation exports. Stream acid neutralizing capacity values are extremely low (–10 to 20 mgreq·L–1) and episodic acidifications (pH declines of a full unit in days or weeks time) occur. Annual streamwater sulfate export is on the order of 770 Eq·ha–1yr–1 or about one-third of total annual inputs, indicating there is net watershed sulfate retention. The system is highly nitrogen saturated (Stage 2, Stoddard, 1994) and this condition promotes both chronic and episodic stream acidification.
Keywords:atmospheric deposition  nitrogen saturation  budgets  calcium export  sulphate adsorption
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