Title of article :
Hydrology and water quality of the headwaters of the River Severn: Stream acidity recovery and interactions with plantation forestry under an improving pollution climate Original Research Article
Author/Authors :
Colin Neal، نويسنده , , Mark Robinson، نويسنده , , Brian Reynolds، نويسنده , , Margaret Neal، نويسنده , , Philip Rowland، نويسنده , , Simon Grant، نويسنده , , David Norris، نويسنده , , Bronwen Williams، نويسنده , , Darren Sleep، نويسنده , , Alan Lawlor، نويسنده ,
Issue Information :
دوهفته نامه با شماره پیاپی سال 2010
Pages :
17
From page :
5035
To page :
5051
Abstract :
This paper presents new information on the hydrology and water quality of the eroding peatland headwaters of the River Severn in mid-Wales and links it to the impact of plantation conifer forestry further down the catchment. The Upper Hafren is dominated by low-growing peatland vegetation, with an average annual precipitation of around 2650 mm with around 250 mm evaporation. With low catchment permeability, stream response to rainfall is “flashy” with the rising limb to peak stormflow typically under an hour. The water quality is characteristically “dilute”; stormflow is acidic and enriched in aluminium and iron from the acid organic soil inputs. Baseflow is circum-neutral and calcium and bicarbonate bearing due to the inputs of groundwater enriched from weathering of the underlying rocks. Annual cycling is observed for the nutrients reflecting uptake and decomposition processes linked to the vegetation and for arsenic implying seasonal water-logging within the peat soils and underlying glacial drift. Over the decadal scale, sulphate and nitrate concentrations have declined while Gran alkalinity, dissolved organic carbon and iron have increased, indicating a reduction in stream acidification. Within the forested areas the water quality is slightly more concentrated and acidic, transgressing the boundary for acid neutralisation capacity as a threshold for biological damage. Annual sulphate and aluminium concentrations are double those observed in the Upper Hafren, reflecting the influence of forestry and the greater ability of trees to scavenge pollutant inputs from gaseous and mist/cloud-water sources compared to short vegetation. Acidification is decreasing more rapidly in the forest compared to the eroding peatland possibly due to the progressive harvesting of the mature forest reducing the scavenging of acidifying inputs. For the Lower Hafren, long-term average annual precipitation is slightly lower, with lower average altitude, at around 2520 mm and evaporation is around double that of the Upper Hafren.
Keywords :
Acidification , Forestry , Peat , River Severn , Hafren , Hydrology , Nutrients , Trace metals
Journal title :
Science of the Total Environment
Serial Year :
2010
Journal title :
Science of the Total Environment
Record number :
986990
Link To Document :
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