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Abstract

Dissolved organic carbon (DOC) is an important component of the global carbon (C) cycle and has profound impacts on water chemistry and metabolism in lakes and rivers. Reported increases of DOC concentration in surface waters across Europe and Northern America have been attributed to several drivers, including changing climate, changing land-use to eutrophication and declining acid deposition. The latter of these suggests that acidic deposition suppressed the solubility of DOC, and that this historic suppression is now being reversed by reducing emissions of acidifying pollutants. We studied a set of four parallel acidification and alkalization experiments in organic matter-rich soils, which, after three years of manipulation, have shown distinct soil solution DOC responses to acidity change. We tested whether these DOC concentration changes were related to changes in the acid/base properties of DOC. Based on laboratory determination of DOC site density (S.D. = amount of carboxylic groups per milligram DOC) and charge density (C.D. = organic acid anion concentration per milligram DOC) we found that the change in DOC soil-solution partitioning was tightly related to the change in degree of dissociation (=C.D.:S.D. ratio) of organic acids (R-2=0.74, P

Published in

European Journal of Soil Science
2013, volume: 64, number: 6, pages: 787-796
Publisher: WILEY-BLACKWELL

SLU Authors

  • Evans, Christopher

    • Centre for Ecology and Hydrology (CEH)

UKÄ Subject classification

Soil Science

Publication identifier

  • DOI: https://doi.org/10.1111/ejss.12089

Permanent link to this page (URI)

https://res.slu.se/id/publ/89038