SPATIAL AND TEMPORAL VARIATION OF SOIL SOLUTION CHEMISTRY AND ION FLUXES THROUGH THE SOIL IN A MATURE NORWAY-SPRUCE (PICEA-ABIES (L) KARST)STAND

Citation
B. Manderscheid et E. Matzner, SPATIAL AND TEMPORAL VARIATION OF SOIL SOLUTION CHEMISTRY AND ION FLUXES THROUGH THE SOIL IN A MATURE NORWAY-SPRUCE (PICEA-ABIES (L) KARST)STAND, Biogeochemistry, 30(2), 1995, pp. 99-114
Citations number
29
Categorie Soggetti
Environmental Sciences","Geosciences, Interdisciplinary
Journal title
ISSN journal
01682563
Volume
30
Issue
2
Year of publication
1995
Pages
99 - 114
Database
ISI
SICI code
0168-2563(1995)30:2<99:SATVOS>2.0.ZU;2-Y
Abstract
In this study we investigated the spatial and temporal variation in so il solution chemistry and of water and ion fluxes through the soil in a forest ecosystem. Our aim was to evaluate the relevance of these var iations for the accuracy of average areal soil solution concentrations and ion fluxes with seepage at 90 cm depth. Twenty spatially distinct 'subcompartments' of approximately 1 m(2) were established within a m ature stand of Norway spruce and ceramic suction lysimeters were insta lled at depths of 20, 35 and 90 cm. A tensiometer was placed close to each suction lysimeter, and one throughfall sampler was established fo r each subcompartment. Soil solution samples were analysed for major i ons (H+, Na+, K+, Ca2+, Mg2+, Mn2+ Fe3+, Al3+, Cl-, NO3-, SO42-). We c alculated water fluxes for each subcompartment separately by a numeric simulation of the soil water flux close to the lysimeters. The ion fl uxes at each lysimeter were calculated by multiplying the simulated wa ter fluxes with the ion concentrations on a fortnightly base. Averagin g these 20 independent ion fluxes gave the areal average flux and an e stimate of its statistical accuracy. The spatial variation of ion conc entrations in the soil solution was high with coefficients of variance ranging from 5% to 128%. Part of the spatial variation was related to stem distance. Temporal variation of the concentrations was less than spatial for most ions. The spatial variation of water and ion fluxes with seepage was also substantial; for example the fluxes of SO42--S c alculated for each subcompartment ranged from 21 to 119 kg ha(-1) yr(- 1), with an arithmetic average of 47 kg ha(-1) yr(-1). For H2O, Mg2+, Cl-, and SO42-,-, the spatial heterogeneity of seepage fluxes was larg ely explained by the heterogeneity of throughfall fluxes. No such rela tionship was found for nitrogen. Despite using 20 replicates, the 95% confidence intervals of the average annual areal fluxes with seepage w ere found to be 20-30% for most ions.