Title of article :
Sediment geochemistry of Al, Fe, and P for two historically
acidic, oligotrophic Maine lakes
Author/Authors :
Tiffany A. Wilsona، نويسنده , , ?، نويسنده , ,
Stephen A. Nortonb، نويسنده , , Bjorn A. Lakea، نويسنده , , Aria Amirbahmana، نويسنده ,
Abstract :
Phosphorus (P) may be liberated from lake sediments by reductive dissolution of Fe(OH)3(S)
during periods of hypolimnetic anoxia. P, however, remains adsorbed to Al(OH)3(S)
regardless of redox conditions. During chronic or episodic acidification of a catchment,
ionic Al is mobilized from soils to receiving waters. A fraction of the mobilized Al may
precipitate as a consequence of higher pH of the receiving waters. We hypothesized that
phosphorus retention in lake sediments is directly related to the magnitude of Al loading in
response to low pH in the watershed. We studied cores representing over 200 years of
sediment accumulation in historically acidic Mud Pond and Little Long Pond in eastern
Maine, USA. Sequential chemical extractions of sediment were used to assess the history of
Al, Fe, and P interactions. Mud Pond is a first-order pond with a pH of ~4.7, having acidified
slightly in response to anthropogenic acidification from ~1930. The inlet stream to Mud
Pond has dissolved Al concentrations often exceeding 500 μg/L, of which more than half is
organically-bound. Mud Pond drains into Little Long Pond, a second-order pond with a
historical pH of b6, and which has shown little pH or alkalinity response to increases or
decreases in atmospheric SO4
2− input.
Sequential extractions show that Al and P are predominantly in the 0.1 M NaOH-extractable
fraction in the sediments from both ponds throughout the cores. The concentration of the
likely biogenic and non-reactive P within the NaOH fraction increases up core from b30% to
~60%. Extractable Fe (b20% of extractable Al) is mainly in the 0.1 M NaOH-extractable
fraction, except for the top few cm, which are predominantly in the bicarbonate-dithionite
reducible fraction. Accumulation rates of sediment, Al, Fe, and P in both ponds have
increased in the last 50–60 yr, but fractions remain in the same proportion. Throughout both
sediment cores the molar ratio of specific Al:P fractions greatly exceeds 25, and molar ratio
of specific Al:Fe fractions greatly exceeds 3, the thresholds proposed by Kopáček et al.
[Kopáček J, Borovec J, Hejzlar J, Ulrich K-U, Norton SA, Amirbahman A. Aluminum control of
phosphorus sorption by lake sediments. Environ Sci Technol 2005; 39: 8784–89.] for P release
during anoxia. The data illustrate a continuous association of P with Al in both ponds during
the last two centuries, likely due to the persistent natural acidity of the catchments