Jm. Ehrman et Ta. Clair, STEP-WISE ANALYSIS OF PRECIPITATION AND RIVER CHEMISTRY TRENDS IN ATLANTIC CANADA, Water, air and soil pollution, 85(2), 1995, pp. 671-676
Monotonic trends in hydrogen (H+), sulfate (SO4-2) and nitrate (NO3-)
were calculated using non-parametric techniques at four Canadian Air a
nd Precipitation Monitoring Network (CAPMoN) sites and six nearby rive
r systems in Atlantic Canada for the period 1983-1991. Over the whole
interval, there were increasing nitrate concentrations and deposition
trends at three of the four monitoring sites and no trends in SO4-2 or
H+ concentrations and deposition. We found that SO42+ concentrations
increased at three of our six river sites, NO3- increased at one site
and H+ decreased at one site. River exports showed no trends in the en
tire study interval. The series were also analyzed in five year time w
indows, incremented by six months, to see if changes in trend presence
or direction would occur, compared to trend analysis over the entire
interval. We show that while trends in river chemistry do not contradi
ct deposition patterns, the changes that occurred were not necessarily
in step. We also found that the trends which we measured were the res
ult of short-term changes as opposed to long-term continuous monotonic
trends. The time lag between precipitation and chemistry trend change
s seemed longer in basins dominated by softwoods than by hardwoods.