Trends in Chemical Composition of Wet-only Precipitation at Rural French Monitoring Stations Over the 1990-2003 Period
2007
Sicard, Pierre | Coddeville, Patrice | Sauvage, Stéphane | Galloo, Jean-Claude
The long-term monitoring of precipitation and its chemical composition are important for identifying trends in rain quality and for assessing the effectiveness of pollution control strategies. A statistical test has been used to the atmospheric concentrations measured in the French rural monitoring network (MERA) in order to bring out spatio-temporal trends in precipitation quality in France over the period 1990-2003. The non-parametric Mann-Kendall test which has been developed for detecting and estimating monotonic trends in the time series was used and applied in our study at annual values of wet-only precipitation concentrations. The emission data suggest that SO₂ and NO x emissions decreased (-3.3 and -2.0% year-¹, respectively) contrary to NH₃ emissions that increased slightly (+0.2% year-¹) over the period 1990-2002 in France. On the national scale, the pH values have a significant decreasing trend of -0.025 ± 0.02 unit pH year-¹. [graphic removed] and [graphic removed] concentrations in precipitation have a significant decreasing trend, -3.0 ± 1.6 and -3.3 ± 0.6% year-¹, respectively, corresponding with the downward trends in SO₂ emissions in France (-3.3% year-¹). A good correlation (R ² = 0.84) between SO₂ emissions and [graphic removed] concentrations was obtained. The decreasing trend of [graphic removed] was more significant (-5.4 ± 5.2% year-¹) than that of [graphic removed] (-1.3 ± 2.4% year-¹). Globally, the concentration of the major ions showed a clear downward trend including marine and alkaline ions. In addition, the relative contribution of HNO₃ to acidity precipitation increased by 51% over the studied period.
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