Identifying Internal Sources of Sulfate in Northern Forest Watersheds

Project Title: 

Evaluation of Discrepancies in Sulfur Budgets of Watersheds in the NE US and SE CA: A Modeling and Isotopic Approach

Award Year: 
2001
Myron Mitchell
SUNY College of Environmental Science & Forestry
Co-Principal Investigator(s):
Scott Bailey
USDA Forest Service Northern Research Station, NH
Charles Driscoll
Syracuse University, NY
Bernhard Mayer
University of Calgary, AB
Collaborator(s): 
James Shanley
US Geological Survey, VT
Ivan Fernandez
University of Maine
Pete Murdoch
US Geological Survey, NY
Mary-Beth Adams
US Forest Service Northern Research Station, WV
Peter Dillon
Trent University, ON
Daniel Houle
Ministere des Ressources naturelles et Faune, QC
Myron Mitchell: Identifying Internal Sources of Sulfate in Northern Forest Watersheds

Sulfur and nitrogen oxides are emitted into the atmosphere primarily from the burning of fossil fuels. These emissions react in the atmosphere to form compounds that are transported long distances and can be deposited as particulate pollutants such as sulfates and nitrates that contribute to acidification of ecosystems. In recent years, there has been a decline in sulfur dioxide emissions and sulfur deposition in the eastern United States. However, there is strong evidence for an unaccounted source of sulfate (SO42-) in watersheds that will delay recovery of ecosystems from the deleterious impacts of acidification.

NSRC researchers used a combination of ongoing investigations on sulfur cycling and isotopic analyses (using other atomic forms of sulfur) to evaluate responses of watersheds to decreases in sulfur deposition. Using chemical mass balances, isotopic determinations, and modeling, researchers identified sources of sulfur on a well-studied set of watersheds in the northeastern United States and southeastern Canada.

Most watersheds showed large net losses of sulfate on an annual basis and evidence of an internal source of sulfate, which is likely from the mineralization of organic sulfur stored from decades of increased sulfur deposition. Mobilization of internal sulfur appears to contribute about 1 to 6 kilograms of sulfur per hectare per year to stream fluxes at these sites and is affecting the rate and extent of recovery from acidification even as sulfur deposition rates have declined. This internal sulfur source should be considered when developing critical deposition loads that will promote ecosystem recovery and reduce loss of critical nutrients in the Northern Forest region. 

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