Biogeochemical budgets in a Mediterranean catchment with high rates of atmospheric N deposition - importance of scale and temporal asynchrony

被引:59
作者
Meixner, T
Fenn, M
机构
[1] Univ Calif Riverside, Dept Environm Sci, Riverside, CA 92521 USA
[2] USDA ARS, Forest Fire Lab, SW Res Stn, Riverside, CA 92507 USA
关键词
catchment; forested ecosystems; hydrology; Mediterranean climate; nitrogen deposition; semi-arid;
D O I
10.1007/s10533-003-4106-3
中图分类号
X [环境科学、安全科学];
学科分类号
08 ; 0830 ;
摘要
In this study biogeochemical export in a set of catchments that vary from 6 ha to almost 1500 ha is investigated. Studying catchments across this large range of scales enables us to investigate the scale dependence and fundamental processes controlling catchment biogeochemical export that would not have been possible with a more limited data set. The Devil Canyon catchment, in the San Bernardino Mountains, California, has some of the highest atmospheric N deposition rates in the world (40-90 kg ha-(1) year(-1) at the crest of the catchment). These high rates of deposition have translated into consistently high levels of NO $((3)) over bar $ in some streams of the San Bernardino Mountains. However, the streams of the Devil Canyon catchment have widely varying dissolved inorganic nitrogen (DIN) concentrations and export. These differences are also, to a more limited extent, present for dissolved organic carbon (DOC) but not in other dissolved species (Cl-, SO2-/(4), Ca2+ and other weathering products). As catchment size increases DIN and DOC concentrations first increase until catchment area is similar to 150 ha but then decrease as catchment scale increases beyond that size. The scale dependence of DIN export implies that catchments at different spatial scales are at different degrees of N saturation. The reason for this scale effect appears to be the dominance of flushing of DIN out of soil at small scales due to the temporal asynchrony between nutrient availability and biological N demand, the ground-water extiltration of this flushed DIN at intermediate scales and the removal of this DIN from streamflow through in-stream processes and groundwater-surface water interaction at larger scales. While the particular scale effect observed here may not occur over the same range in catchment area in other ecosystems, it is likely that other ecosystems have similar scale dependant export for DIN and DOC.
引用
收藏
页码:331 / 356
页数:26
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