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Hydrological and biological processes modulate carbon,nitrogen and phosphorus flux from the St. Lawrence River to its estuary (Quebec,Canada)
Authors:Christiane Hudon  Pierre Gagnon  Myriam Rondeau  Serge Hébert  Denis Gilbert  Brad Hill  Michel Patoine  Michel Starr
Institution:1.Czech Geological Survey,Prague,Czech Republic;2.Global Change Research Institute,Brno,Czech Republic;3.Department of Natural Resources and the Environment,University of New Hampshire,Durham,USA;4.Institute of Geology,Prague,Czech Republic;5.Institute of Hydrodynamics,Prague,Czech Republic
Abstract:Changes in atmospheric deposition, stream water chemistry, and solute fluxes were assessed across 15 small forested catchments. Dramatic changes in atmospheric deposition have occurred over the last three decades, including a 70% reduction in sulphur (S) deposition. These changes in atmospheric inputs have been associated with expected changes in levels of acidity, sulphate and base cations in streams. Soil retention of S appeared to partially explain rates of chemical recovery. In addition to these changes in acid–base chemistry we also observed unexpected changes in nitrogen (N) biogeochemistry and nutrient stoichiometry of stream water, including decreased stream N concentrations. Among all catchments the average flux of dissolved inorganic nitrogen (DIN) was best predicted by average runoff, soil chemistry (forest floor C/N) and levels of acid deposition (both S and N). The rate of change in stream DIN flux, however, was much more closely correlated with reductions in rates of S deposition rather than those of DIN. Unlike DIN fluxes, the average concentrations as well as the rates of decline in streamwater nitrate (NO3) concentration over time were tightly linked to stream dissolved organic carbon/dissolved organic nitrogen ratios DOC/DON and DON/TP rather than catchment characteristics. Declines in phosphorus adsorption with increasing soil pH appear to contribute to the relationship between C, N, and P in our study catchments. Our observations suggest that catchment P availability and its alteration due to environmental changes (e.g. acidification) might have profound effects on N cycling and catchment N retention that have been largely unrecognized.
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