» Articles » PMID: 28662430

Trends of Two Decadal Precipitation Chemistry in a Subtropical Rainforest in East Asia

Overview
Date 2017 Jun 30
PMID 28662430
Citations 2
Authors
Affiliations
Soon will be listed here.
Abstract

Long-term monitoring of precipitation chemistry provides a great opportunity to examine the evolution of air pollutant emissions and effectiveness of air pollution control measures. We evaluated the characteristics and trends of precipitation chemistry at both annual and seasonal scales based on the records of 1994-2013 at Fushan Experimental Forest (FEF) of northeastern Taiwan. The results showed that 77% of the weekly precipitation had pH<5.0. The two-decadal average annual pH was 4.62, without a significant inter-annual trend, possibly due to the concurrent declines of both acidic pollutants and base cations. There was a significant positive relationship between [SO+NO] and [Ca+NH] indicating that their deposition was likely dominated by NHNO, (NH)SO, Ca(NO), and CaSO. There was a significant negative relationship between precipitation pH and the difference between [SO+NO] and [Ca+NH], not just [SO+NO], suggesting that precipitation acidity was not solely determined by acidic pollutants but by the balance between acidic pollutants and base cations. We also found temporal decreases of Ca and NH concentrations in precipitation which contributed to the low acid neutralization capacity of precipitation. Annual deposition of NO and SO was 23 and 55kghayr, which is much higher than most forest sites in the industrialized countries suggesting that acid deposition is still a major environmental issue in Taiwan. Annual deposition of NH, Ca and NO showed significant decreasing trends during the 20-year period, which was mostly due to the decreases in the summer deposition associated with air pollution mitigation strategies. Winter deposition showed no decreasing patterns for the same period. The high contribution to annual acid deposition from autumn-winter and spring rains (50%) associated with northeast monsoon implies that long-range transport of anthropogenic emissions from East Asia played a key role on acid depositions at FEF and possibly many areas in the region. Therefore, intergovernmental cooperation is urgently needed to effectively mitigate the threat of acid deposition in East Asia.

Citing Articles

Responses of a common tropical epiphyte, , to changes in water and nutrient availability.

Chen X, Hogan J, Wang C, Wang P, Lin T AoB Plants. 2023; 15(6):plad076.

PMID: 38046406 PMC: 10689150. DOI: 10.1093/aobpla/plad076.


Global Trends of Acidity in Rainfall and Its Impact on Plants and Soil.

Prakash J, Agrawal S, Agrawal M J Soil Sci Plant Nutr. 2022; 23(1):398-419.

PMID: 36415481 PMC: 9672585. DOI: 10.1007/s42729-022-01051-z.