S. Wograth et R. Psenner, SEASONAL, ANNUAL AND LONG-TERM VARIABILITY IN THE WATER CHEMISTRY OF A REMOTE HIGH-MOUNTAIN LAKE - ACID-RAIN VERSUS NATURAL CHANGES, Water, air and soil pollution, 85(2), 1995, pp. 359-364
Seasonal fluctuations as well as long-term trends in water chemistry w
ere studied in Schwruzsee ob Solden (Tyrol, Austria), an oligotrophic
softwater lake situated at 2796 m a.s.l. The catchement is composed of
granite, plagioclase and micaschists containing considerable amounts
of sulphur, with little soil cover. The lake is ice covered for about
nine months, during this time the deepest layers (>16m) become anoxic.
During summer overturn, alkalinity (ALK) is lowest (-8 mu eq l(-1)) i
n the whole water column, whereas pH reaches its minimum (4.88) at the
surface during snowmelt. A decrease of pH from 5.8 to 5.4 during wint
er is caused by CO2 oversaturation, but deep water ALK increases to up
to 130 mu eq l(-1) due to in-lake ALK generation by reductive process
es and base cation (BC) release. The seasonal pattern of ALK in SOS is
driven by in-lake processes in winter, the snowmelting in spring and
watershed processes and precipitation during summer. Since 1989 summer
sulfate concentrations in SOS, originating mainly from the catchment
show a tendency to increase presumably caused by enhanced weathering.
In contrast, SO42-. concentrations in other high mountain lakes which
are dominated by atmospheric depositions show a decreasing trend. SOS
is a good example for the complexity of interactions between catchment
and in-lake processes which act at different time scales and depend o
n climate changes and atmospheric inputs.