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Library Solute geochemical mass-balances and mineral weathering rates in small watersheds II: Biomass nutrient uptake, more equations in more unknowns, and land use/land cover effects

Solute geochemical mass-balances and mineral weathering rates in small watersheds II: Biomass nutrient uptake, more equations in more unknowns, and land use/land cover effects

Solute geochemical mass-balances and mineral weathering rates in small watersheds II: Biomass nutrient uptake, more equations in more unknowns, and land use/land cover effects

Resource information

Date of publication
декабря 2012
Resource Language
ISBN / Resource ID
AGRIS:US201500202028
Pages
1247-1265

Paired watersheds are used to develop a deciduous nutrient uptake stoichiometry. The watersheds are those of the House Rock Run and the Brubaker Run located in the Pennsylvania Appalachian Piedmont, USA. These two watersheds are nearly identical with respect to bedrock, regolith, climate, geomorphology, morphometry, baseflow hydrology, and type and successional stage of forest vegetation. They only differ by the percentage of deciduous forest cover, with House Rock Run having 59% and Brubaker Run having 76%. From differences in their stream chemistries the biomass nutrient uptake stoichiometry of K₁.₀Mg₁.₀Ca₁.₄ was determined. This stoichiometry applies to an aggrading deciduous biomass and differs from those previously used which were derived from net primary production (NPP) data. The difference may reflect that macronutrients in plant tissue may also originate from atmospheric inputs and/or decomposing biomass. Although this stoichiometry may not be applied to all deciduous forest-covered watersheds, it is likely an improvement over a stoichiometry determined from NPP data. Mass-balance calculations of mineral weathering rates often suffer from the number of unknowns exceeding the number of equations. To add equations to the mass-balance matrices two methods are introduced. The first method employs Zr-normalized bulk chemical compositions of bedrock and soil to calculate a mass transfer coefficient for chemical weathering. The second approach uses chemical formulae and modal abundances of primary minerals undergoing complete dissolution during weathering. Both methods allow for calculation of weathering rate constraints without biomass and cation exchange influences. These constraints serve as additional equations in the mass-balance matrix. This study finds that the watershed with the higher percentage of recently abandoned agricultural fields previously used for growing row crops has the higher chemical weathering rate. The higher chemical weathering rate reflects greater runoff resulting from reduced evapotranspiration.

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Authors and Publishers

Author(s), editor(s), contributor(s)

Price, Jason R.
Hardy, Christopher R.
Tefend, Karen Sue
Szymanski, David W.

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Geographical focus