Current, steady-state and historical weathering rates of base cations at two forest sites in northern and southern Sweden: a comparison of three methods

Reliable and accurate methods for estimating soil mineral weathering rates are required tools in evaluating the sustainability of increased harvesting of forest biomass and assessments of critical loads of acidity. A variety of methods that differ in concept, temporal and spatial scale, and data req...

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Main Authors: Casetou-Gustafson, Sophie, Grip, Harald, Hillier, Stephen, Linder, Sune, Olsson, Bengt, Simonsson, Magnus, Stendahl, Johan
Format: Article in Journal/Newspaper
Language:Swedish
English
Published: 2020
Subjects:
Online Access:https://pub.epsilon.slu.se/16665/
https://pub.epsilon.slu.se/16665/1/Casetou-Gustafsson_et_al_200306.pdf
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spelling ftslunivuppsala:oai:pub.epsilon.slu.se:16665 2023-05-15T17:45:14+02:00 Current, steady-state and historical weathering rates of base cations at two forest sites in northern and southern Sweden: a comparison of three methods Casetou-Gustafson, Sophie Grip, Harald Hillier, Stephen Linder, Sune Olsson, Bengt Simonsson, Magnus Stendahl, Johan 2020 application/pdf https://pub.epsilon.slu.se/16665/ https://pub.epsilon.slu.se/16665/1/Casetou-Gustafsson_et_al_200306.pdf sv eng swe eng https://pub.epsilon.slu.se/16665/1/Casetou-Gustafsson_et_al_200306.pdf Casetou-Gustafson, Sophie and Grip, Harald and Hillier, Stephen and Linder, Sune and Olsson, Bengt and Simonsson, Magnus and Stendahl, Johan (2020). Current, steady-state and historical weathering rates of base cations at two forest sites in northern and southern Sweden: a comparison of three methods. Biogeosciences. 17 , 281-304 [Research article] cc_by_4 CC-BY Ecology Research article PeerReviewed info:eu-repo/semantics/article 2020 ftslunivuppsala 2022-01-09T19:15:01Z Reliable and accurate methods for estimating soil mineral weathering rates are required tools in evaluating the sustainability of increased harvesting of forest biomass and assessments of critical loads of acidity. A variety of methods that differ in concept, temporal and spatial scale, and data requirements are available for measuring weathering rates. In this study, causes of discrepancies in weathering rates between methods were analysed and were classified as being either conceptual (inevitable) or random. The release rates of base cations (BCs; Ca, Mg, K, Na) by weathering were estimated in podzolised glacial tills at two experimental forest sites, Asa and Flakaliden, in southern and northern Sweden, respectively. Three different methods were used: (i) historical weathering since deglaciation estimated by the depletion method, using Zr as the assumed inert reference; (ii) steady-state weathering rate estimated with the PROFILE model, based on quantitative analysis of soil mineralogy; and (iii) BC budget at stand scale, using measured deposition, leaching and changes in base cation stocks in biomass and soil over a period of 12 years. In the 050 cm soil horizon historical weathering of BCs was 10.6 and 34.1 mmolc m(-2) yr(-1), at Asa and Flakaliden, respectively. Corresponding values of PROFILE weathering rates were 37.1 and 42.7 mmolc m(-2) yr(-1). The PROFILE results indi- cated that steady-state weathering rate increased with soil depth as a function of exposed mineral surface area, reaching a maximum rate at 80 cm (Asa) and 60 cm (Flakaliden). In contrast, the depletion method indicated that the largest postglacial losses were in upper soil horizons, particularly at Flakaliden.With the exception of Mg and Ca in shallow soil horizons, PROFILE produced higher weathering rates than the depletion method, particularly of K and Na in deeper soil horizons. The lower weathering rates of the depletion method were partly explained by natural and anthropogenic variability in Zr gradients. The base cation budget approach produced significantly higher weathering rates of BCs, 134.6 mmolc m(-2) yr(-1) at Asa and 73.2 mmolc m(-2) yr(-1) at Flakaliden, due to high rates estimated for the nutrient elements Ca, Mg and K, whereas weathering rates were lower and similar to those for the depletion method (6.6 and 2.2 mmolc m(-2) yr(-1) at Asa and Flakaliden). The large discrepancy in weathering rates for Ca, Mg and K between the base cation budget approach and the other methods suggests additional sources for tree uptake in the soil not captured by measurements. Article in Journal/Newspaper Northern Sweden Swedish University of Agricultural Sciences (SLU): Epsilon Open Archive
institution Open Polar
collection Swedish University of Agricultural Sciences (SLU): Epsilon Open Archive
op_collection_id ftslunivuppsala
language Swedish
English
topic Ecology
spellingShingle Ecology
Casetou-Gustafson, Sophie
Grip, Harald
Hillier, Stephen
Linder, Sune
Olsson, Bengt
Simonsson, Magnus
Stendahl, Johan
Current, steady-state and historical weathering rates of base cations at two forest sites in northern and southern Sweden: a comparison of three methods
topic_facet Ecology
description Reliable and accurate methods for estimating soil mineral weathering rates are required tools in evaluating the sustainability of increased harvesting of forest biomass and assessments of critical loads of acidity. A variety of methods that differ in concept, temporal and spatial scale, and data requirements are available for measuring weathering rates. In this study, causes of discrepancies in weathering rates between methods were analysed and were classified as being either conceptual (inevitable) or random. The release rates of base cations (BCs; Ca, Mg, K, Na) by weathering were estimated in podzolised glacial tills at two experimental forest sites, Asa and Flakaliden, in southern and northern Sweden, respectively. Three different methods were used: (i) historical weathering since deglaciation estimated by the depletion method, using Zr as the assumed inert reference; (ii) steady-state weathering rate estimated with the PROFILE model, based on quantitative analysis of soil mineralogy; and (iii) BC budget at stand scale, using measured deposition, leaching and changes in base cation stocks in biomass and soil over a period of 12 years. In the 050 cm soil horizon historical weathering of BCs was 10.6 and 34.1 mmolc m(-2) yr(-1), at Asa and Flakaliden, respectively. Corresponding values of PROFILE weathering rates were 37.1 and 42.7 mmolc m(-2) yr(-1). The PROFILE results indi- cated that steady-state weathering rate increased with soil depth as a function of exposed mineral surface area, reaching a maximum rate at 80 cm (Asa) and 60 cm (Flakaliden). In contrast, the depletion method indicated that the largest postglacial losses were in upper soil horizons, particularly at Flakaliden.With the exception of Mg and Ca in shallow soil horizons, PROFILE produced higher weathering rates than the depletion method, particularly of K and Na in deeper soil horizons. The lower weathering rates of the depletion method were partly explained by natural and anthropogenic variability in Zr gradients. The base cation budget approach produced significantly higher weathering rates of BCs, 134.6 mmolc m(-2) yr(-1) at Asa and 73.2 mmolc m(-2) yr(-1) at Flakaliden, due to high rates estimated for the nutrient elements Ca, Mg and K, whereas weathering rates were lower and similar to those for the depletion method (6.6 and 2.2 mmolc m(-2) yr(-1) at Asa and Flakaliden). The large discrepancy in weathering rates for Ca, Mg and K between the base cation budget approach and the other methods suggests additional sources for tree uptake in the soil not captured by measurements.
format Article in Journal/Newspaper
author Casetou-Gustafson, Sophie
Grip, Harald
Hillier, Stephen
Linder, Sune
Olsson, Bengt
Simonsson, Magnus
Stendahl, Johan
author_facet Casetou-Gustafson, Sophie
Grip, Harald
Hillier, Stephen
Linder, Sune
Olsson, Bengt
Simonsson, Magnus
Stendahl, Johan
author_sort Casetou-Gustafson, Sophie
title Current, steady-state and historical weathering rates of base cations at two forest sites in northern and southern Sweden: a comparison of three methods
title_short Current, steady-state and historical weathering rates of base cations at two forest sites in northern and southern Sweden: a comparison of three methods
title_full Current, steady-state and historical weathering rates of base cations at two forest sites in northern and southern Sweden: a comparison of three methods
title_fullStr Current, steady-state and historical weathering rates of base cations at two forest sites in northern and southern Sweden: a comparison of three methods
title_full_unstemmed Current, steady-state and historical weathering rates of base cations at two forest sites in northern and southern Sweden: a comparison of three methods
title_sort current, steady-state and historical weathering rates of base cations at two forest sites in northern and southern sweden: a comparison of three methods
publishDate 2020
url https://pub.epsilon.slu.se/16665/
https://pub.epsilon.slu.se/16665/1/Casetou-Gustafsson_et_al_200306.pdf
genre Northern Sweden
genre_facet Northern Sweden
op_relation https://pub.epsilon.slu.se/16665/1/Casetou-Gustafsson_et_al_200306.pdf
Casetou-Gustafson, Sophie and Grip, Harald and Hillier, Stephen and Linder, Sune and Olsson, Bengt and Simonsson, Magnus and Stendahl, Johan (2020). Current, steady-state and historical weathering rates of base cations at two forest sites in northern and southern Sweden: a comparison of three methods. Biogeosciences. 17 , 281-304 [Research article]
op_rights cc_by_4
op_rightsnorm CC-BY
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