1 research outputs found
Contemporary Mobilization of Legacy Pb Stores by DOM in a Boreal Peatland
We examined how different landscape
areas in a catchment containing
a northern ombrotrophic peatland and upland mineral soils responded
to dramatic decreases in atmospheric deposition of lead (Pb). Pb concentrations
in the outflow stream from the peatland measured from 2009–2015
indicated continued mobilization and export of Pb derived from historic
inputs to the bog. In contrast, Pb concentrations in surface peat
and runoff from upland mineral soils have declined in response to
reductions in atmospheric deposition. Relative to the early 1980s,
Pb concentrations in the streamflow decreased only ∼50%, while
Pb in surface peat and upland subsurface runoff decreased by more
than 90%. Water level fluctuations in the slow-accumulating peat have
allowed dissolved organic matter (DOM) to continue mobilizing Pb deposited
in the peatland decades earlier. Strong correlations between dissolved
organic carbon (DOC) and Pb concentrations in outflow from the peatland
and in bog porewaters demonstrate Pb mobility related to DOM production.
Peat stores of Pb in 2016 were less than or equal to those reported
in the early 1980s despite the dry mass inventory increasing by 60–80%.
Much of the loss in Pb stored in peat can be accounted for by stream
runoff from the peatland