Title of article :
Air–soil exchange of mercury from background soils
in the United States
Author/Authors :
J.A. Ericksen، نويسنده , , M.S. Gustin، نويسنده , , M. Xin، نويسنده , , P.J. Weisberg، نويسنده , , G.C.J. Fernandez، نويسنده ,
Issue Information :
هفته نامه با شماره پیاپی سال 2006
Abstract :
The air–surface exchange of mercury (Hg) was measured, using a dynamic polycarbonate flux chamber, for soils with low or
bbackgroundQ Hg concentrations (b0.1 mg/kg) at eleven locations across the contiguous United States. Sampling locations
included agricultural, desert, grassland, mixed and pine forest ecosystems (n =1326 soil flux measurements at 46 individual
sites). An overall soil Hg flux of 0.9F0.2 ng/m2/h for these background soils was obtained by averaging the means for the
different locations. Soil Hg fluxes were significantly lower in dark conditions than in the light for all but the grassland sites. Mean
inlet air Hg concentrations were 1.0F0.1 ng/m3 in the dark and 1.3F0.2 ng/m3 in the light. Soil temperature inside and outside of
the chamber, air temperature, relative humidity, and irradiance were measured concurrently with soil Hg flux. Soil–air Hg exchange
was weakly predicted by environmental variables (R2 from 0.07 to 0.52). For a single location, flux was better correlated with soil
moisture than other measured environmental parameters, suggesting that soil moisture might be an important driver for Hg
emissions from background soils. In addition, based on data collected we suggest some quality control measures for use of
TekranR 2537A analyzers when measuring low mercury fluxes. Using basic scaling procedures, we roughly estimate that natural
emissions from soils in the contiguous U.S. release ~100 Mg/yr of Hg to the atmosphere.
Keywords :
mercury , Air soil exchange , quality control , Dynamic flux chambers
Journal title :
Science of the Total Environment
Journal title :
Science of the Total Environment