Long-term changes in atmospheric nitrogen deposition and stream water nitrate leaching from forested watersheds in western Japan
2021
Chiwa, Masaaki
Japan receives nitrogenous air pollutants via long-range transport from China. However, emissions of nitrogenous air pollutants in China have stabilized or decreased in recent years. This study examined both the long-term trends in atmospheric nitrogen (N) deposition from the 1990s to the 2010s and the response of stream water nitrate (NO₃⁻) leaching from forested areas in western Japan. A long-term (1992–2018) temporal analysis of atmospheric N deposition in Fukuoka (western Japan) was conducted. Atmospheric bulk N deposition was collected at forested sites in a suburban forest (Swₑₛₜ) and a rural forest (Rwₑₛₜ) in western Japan during 2009–2018. Stream water samples were also collected from four locations at sites Swₑₛₜ and Rwₑₛₜ during the same period. Results showed that atmospheric N deposition in Fukuoka started to decrease from the mid-2000s at an annual rate of −2.5% yr⁻¹. The decrease in atmospheric N deposition was attributable mainly to decreased atmospheric ammonium (NH₄⁺) deposition, which caused greater contribution of NO₃⁻ deposition to atmospheric N deposition. Concentrations of NO₃⁻ in the stream water samples from three of the four locations decreased significantly at an annual rate of −3.7 to −0.7% yr⁻¹. However, stream water NO₃⁻ concentrations increased in one watershed where understory vegetation has been deteriorating owing to the increased deer population. This might weaken the recovery of N leaching from forested areas.
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