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Mercury emission from terrestrial background surfaces in the eastern USA. II: Air/surface exchange of mercury within forests from South Carolina to New England
Authors:Todd Kuiken  Mae Gustin  Hong Zhang  Steve Lindberg  Ben Sedinger
Institution:1. Center for the Management, Utilization and Protection of Water Resources, Tennessee Tech University, Cookeville, TN 38505, USA;2. Department of Chemistry, Tennessee Tech University, Cookeville, TN 38505, USA;3. Department of Natural Resources and Environmental Science, University of Nevada, Reno (UNR), NV 89557, USA;4. Oak Ridge National Laboratory (ORNL), USA;5. Adjunct Professor at University of Tennessee, USA;6. Adjunct Professor at University of Michigan, USA
Abstract:Mercury air/surface exchange was measured over litter-covered soils with low Hg concentrations within various types of forests along the eastern seaboard of the USA. The fieldwork was conducted at six forested sites in state parks in South Carolina, North Carolina, New Jersey, Pennsylvania, New York and Maine from mid-May to early June 2005. The study showed that the Hg air/surface exchange was consistently very low and similar (overall daytime mean flux = 0.2 ± 0.9 ng m−2 h−1, n = 310, for all six sites monitored) with the various forest types. These flux values are comparable with those found in a year-long study in Tennessee (yearly daytime mean = 0.4 ± 0.5 ng m−2 h−1), but lower than many previous flux results reported for background soils. The Hg fluxes at all sites oscillated around zero, with many episodes of deposition (negative fluxes) occurring in both daytime and nighttime. While there were particular days showing significant correlations among the Hg air/surface exchange and certain environmental parameters, perhaps because of the low fluxes encountered, few significant correlations were found for any particular day of sampling between the Hg flux and environmental parameters such as solar radiation, soil temperature, air temperature (little variability seen), relative humidity, and ambient air Hg concentrations. Factors driving the Hg exchange as previously found for enriched soils may not hold for these background litter-covered forest soils. The results suggest that spatial variations of the Hg air/surface exchange were small among these different forest types for this particular time of year.
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