Literature DB >> 35350610

Estimating base cation weathering rates in the United States: challenges of uncertain soil mineralogy and specific surface area with applications of the PROFILE model.

Colin J Whitfield1, Jennifer Phelan2, John Buckley2, Christopher Clark3, Scott Guthrie2, Jason Lynch4.   

Abstract

The weathering release rate of base cations (BCw) from soil minerals is fundamentally important for terrestrial ecosystem growth, function, and sensitivity to acid deposition. Understanding BCw is necessary to reduce or prevent damage to acid-sensitive natural systems, in that this information is needed to both evaluate the effectiveness of existing policies, and guide establishment of further policies in the event they are required. Yet BCw is challenging to estimate. In this study, major sources of uncertainty associated with a process-based model (PROFILE) commonly used to estimate weathering rates were quantified in the context of efforts to quantify BCw for upland forest sites across the continental U.S. These include uncertainty associated with parameterization of mineral content where horizon data are not available, stoichiometry of individual minerals, and specific surface area of soil and individual soil minerals. Mineral stoichiometry was not an important influence on BCw estimates (uncertainty < 1%). Characterizing B horizon mineralogy by averaging A and C horizons was found to be a minor (< 5%) contributor to uncertainty in some areas, but where mineralogy is known to vary with depth the uncertainty can be large. Estimating mineral-specific surface areas had a strong influence on estimated BCw, with rates increasing by as much as 250%. The greatest uncertainty in BCw estimates, however, was attributed to the particle size class-based method used to estimate the total specific surface area upon which weathering reactions can take place. The resulting uncertainty in BCw spanned multiple orders of magnitude at individual sites, highlighting this as the greatest challenge to ongoing efforts to produce robust BCw estimates across large spatial scales in the U.S. Recommendations for improving estimates of BCw to support robust decision making for protection against terrestrial acidification are provided.

Entities:  

Keywords:  acid deposition; base cations; mineral weathering; mineralogy; specific surface area; uncertainty; upland forest

Year:  2018        PMID: 35350610      PMCID: PMC8958929          DOI: 10.1007/s11270-018-3691-7

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Water Air Soil Pollut        ISSN: 0049-6979            Impact factor:   2.520


  6 in total

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