Abstract

Sulphur dioxide in air as well as dry deposition of sulphur dioxide to a forest has decreased by a factor of 20 during the last two decades. It was earlier found that the internal circulation of calcium in Norway spruce follows the dry deposition of sulphur dioxide. The sulphur and calcium fluxes from 1992 were calculated from wet deposition, throughfall and a surrogate surface. Earlier fluxes from 1981 to 1991 were calculated using assumptions of the dry deposition of non-marine sulphate and calcium. The new estimates confirm the earlier studies that the internal circulation of calcium in a coniferous forest is directly related to the dry deposition of sulphur dioxide to the canopies and that the internal circulation of calcium decreases at the same rate as the deposition of sulphur decreased during the last two decades. The deposition fluxes were also compared to run-off and uptake of calcium in the forest as well as on modelled weathering rates from severely acidified forested catchments near the coast and inland and the soil pool. A reconstruction of changes in the soil pool of calcium over the last 100 years indicate that the soil pool has decreased by ca. 70% in catchments with complete harvest of the forest and ca. 40% if branches and needles are left on the ground. In a natural forest without acid deposition the soil pool of calcium would have increased by 6%. Estimates for the 21st century show that harvesting of stems + branches and needles may almost empty the soil pool of calcium in the next 100 years. Increased nitrogen deposition has increased forest growth, which indirectly increased uptake of calcium by the trees and indirectly caused a further decrease of the soil pool of calcium.

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