Aluminium speciation, toxicity and transfert from soils to surface waters in two contrasting watersheds exposed to acid deposition in the Vosges Mountains (north-eastern France)
Titre | Aluminium speciation, toxicity and transfert from soils to surface waters in two contrasting watersheds exposed to acid deposition in the Vosges Mountains (north-eastern France) |
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Type de document | chapitre |
Auteur(s) | Maitat, O. Boudot, J-P. Merlet, D. Rouiller, J. |
Date | 1998 |
Titre de la publication | Effect of Mineral-Organic-Microorganism Interactions on Soil and Freshwater Environments |
Editeur | Springer |
Lieu d'édition | Boston, USA |
Coordonateur(s) | Berthelin, J.|Huang, P. M.|Bollag, J.-M.|Andreux, F. |
N° de page(s) | 97-105 |
Résumé | Despite considerable research in the past decades, acid deposition remains a serious environmental problem for many areas in the northern hemisphere, particularly in the northeast United States (Driscoll and Van Dreason, 1993| David and Lawrence, 1996) and Central and Northern Europe (Ulrich et al., 1980| Nilsson et al., 1983| Rosseland and Henriksen, 1990| Matzner and Prenzel, 1992| DeVries et al., 1995), including the north-east of France in the Vosges mountains (Probst et al., 1990| Boudot et ai, 1994a). Acid inputs may have negative impacts on the chemistry and the biological quality of soils and surface waters, particularly through the appearance of soluble inorganic Al species (some of them being toxic to plants and aquatic communities), nutrient imbalance and low pH. Both forest decline and freshwater impoverishment may be related to acidification processes and its related nutrient imbalance as well as the occurrence of soluble Al (Baker and Schofield, 1982| Boudot et al, 1994). |
Site | https://link.springer.com/chapter/10.1007/978-1-4615-4683-2_10 |
isbn | 978-1-4613-7120-5 |
Langue | Anglais |
Collection |
Notre bibliothèque |
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