Seasonal inorganic nitrogen release in alpine lakes on the Colorado western slope

Physical Geography
By: , and 

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Abstract

In the Rocky Mountains, the association of increases in acidic deposition with increased atmospheric loading of sulfate and direct changes in surface water chemistry has been well established. The importance, though, of increased nitrogen (N) deposition in the episodic acidification of alpine lakes and N saturation in alpine ecosystems is only beginning to be documented. In alpine areas of the Colorado Front Range, modest loadings of N in deposition have been associated with leakage of N to surface waters. On the Colorado western slope, however, no leakage of N to surface waters has been reported. A 1995 study that included early season under-ice water samples that were not available in earlier studies showed that there is, in fact, N leakage to surface waters in some western slope basins. Under-ice nitrate (NO- 3) concentrations were as high as 10.5 μeq L-1 and only decreased to detection limits in September. Landscape type appears to be important in leakage of N to surface waters, which is associated with basins having steep slopes, thin soils, and large amounts of exposed bedrock. NO- 3 leakage compounds the existing sensitivity to episodic acidification from low acid neutralizing capacity (ANC), which is less than 40 μeq L-1 in those basins. 

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Publication type Article
Publication Subtype Journal Article
Title Seasonal inorganic nitrogen release in alpine lakes on the Colorado western slope
Series title Physical Geography
DOI 10.1080/02723646.1998.10642658
Volume 19
Issue 5
Publication Date May 15, 2013
Year Published 1998
Language English
Publisher Taylor & Francis
Description 15 p.
First page 406
Last page 420
Country United States
State Colorado
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