Long-Term Impact of Drought on AcidSulfate Soil Leaching, a Study of NineCatchment Areas in Sweden and Finland

University essay from Uppsala universitet/Luft-, vatten- och landskapslära

Abstract: Sediments rich in sulfide were deposited in the Littorina sea in an environment that was shallow, anoxic,and reductive. The sediments were brought above sea level by isostatic uplift and can now be foundalong the coast of the Baltic sea. These sulfide rich sediments oxidize when they are exposed to air whenthe water table is lowered due to uplift, anthropogenic activities, or hydrological droughts. Oxidation ofsulfate soils will lower the pH and mobilize metals in the soil that will leach into adjacent rivers and willimpact the water chemistry and damage ecosystems. A few studies have noted that leaching increasesin sulfate soils after drought which has resulted in fish death. The impact of droughts on leaching from sulfate soils were investigated in nine rivers (Flarkbäcken,Hertsångerälven, Kvismare canal, Kyro river, Närpes River, Persöfjärden, Storbäcken, Tjuståsaån, andToby river) by looking at time series of sulfate concentrations and drought periods. The impact on riversafter a drought was studied by plotting the deviation from median specific discharge in summer andautumn against the deviation from median concentration of SO42-, a suite of metals and pH the followingseason with high discharge e.g. spring. The metals that were examined in the river were Aluminum (Al),Cadmium, (Cd), Cobalt (Co), Cupper (Cu), Iron (Fe), Manganese (Mn), Nickle (Ni), Zinc (Zn).TheKendall’s τ was then used to determine if the relationship between discharge and leached compoundconcentration was significant and which direction it had. In the sulfate timeseries the hydrological droughts generally coincided with low SO42- and werefollowed by SO42- peaks. The sulfate concentrations increased significantly after droughts, and theincrease in SO42- lasted for 1-3 years for most rivers. In two Finnish rivers the SO42- remained higher alonger time of 5 years in Kyro river and Närpes river after multiyear droughts. In Kvismare canal, Kyroriver, Närpes river and Tjuståsaån the SO42- concentration was higher in the mid-1900s which could bedue to changes in ditching activity, the acid sulfate soils transitioning to post active sulfate soils afterthe ditching activity stopped in the regions, or SO42- air deposition historically being greater. SO42-, Co, Ni, and Zn had negative significant correlations in a majority of the rivers, while pH, Fe,and total organic carbon had significant positive correlations a majority of rivers. A negative correlationindicates high concentrations of the leached compound after a drought while positive correlationsindicate low concentrations of the leached compound after a drought. Al, Cd, Cu, and Mn did not havea significant correlation in a majority of the rivers which could be due to their dependence on pH whichwill not always change in the rivers in spring due to acidic water leaching from acid sulfate soils sincethe acidic water will be diluted by meltwater.

  AT THIS PAGE YOU CAN DOWNLOAD THE WHOLE ESSAY. (follow the link to the next page)