1 / 1

The impact of industrial SO 2 pollution on north Bohemia conifers

University of St Andrews. Paper number: B53B-0665.

faolan
Télécharger la présentation

The impact of industrial SO 2 pollution on north Bohemia conifers

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. University of St Andrews Paper number: B53B-0665 MethodologySites with similar attributes (e.g. elevation, aspect) were selected for sampling, with distance from pollution source as the primary modulating variable.Sites included 1 Silver fir and 5 (+1 additional dataset ’KRK’ from ITRDB) Norway spruce sites located SE of the power station.Gridded climate data were used as climate model inputs and a composite of 44 regional SO2 datasets were used as SO2 inputs. Suppression and Distance AimAssessing the spatio-temporal impact of atmospheric SO2 pollution from a single point source of pollution (a coal-fired power station) on conifer tree-growth in the Jizerské Mts. using dendrochronological methods. Climate model: Modelling of tree growth based on available temperature (and precipitation data where applicable) using OLS regression was used to predict theoretical growth between 1975-2005 based on the relationship established in the 1940-1974 calibration period.Climate + SO2 model:A second model was developed which also included regional SO2 data in addition to climate data. The impact of industrial SO2 pollution on north Bohemia conifers Fig.5: Scatter plot showing a strong positive relationship between (A) the 1980, and (B) mean of 1975-1985 Norway spruce site ring-width indices, and distance from Turów ResultsTree growthresponded mainly to summer temperatures, although precipitation also had an additional minor influence at some sites.Presence of abrupt, decade-long growth suppression in all spruce chronologies was observed (Fig.3).Sites closest to Turów experienced greatest suppression in 1980 and the following decade.Analysis of 268 identified missing rings (Fig.4) revealed increased incidence at sites closest to Turów around 1980, further reflecting stressful growth conditions.Rapid response to high SO2 concentrations suggested greater significance of direct atmospheric SO2 rather than an indirect influence through soil acidification (Elling et al. 2009).Unfavourable climatic conditions (e.g. heavy winter frost) likely 'triggered' a period of growth suppression in stands stressed by high pollution levels. A strong relationship between growth suppression and distance of sites from Turów was identified (Fig.5). Comparing Jizerské Mts.and Bavarian Forest Fig.1: Regional context and site locations Fig.6: Comparison of Czech and German conifer sites, and regional SO2 index / emissions BackgroundThe study region (Fig.1), centrally situated inside the so-called ‘Black Triangle’ in the heavily industrialised border area of the Czech Republic, Poland and Germany, is considered to have had some of the highest levels of atmospheric pollution in Europe in the 1970s and 1980s.The 2100 MW Turów power station, in operation since 1962 is fuelled by locally mined lignite with a high sulphur content and is the dominant source of regional pollution.Modernisation of the power station in the 1990s resulted in an 82% decrease of SO2 emissions, reduction of NOX by 45% and a 96% reduction of dust pollution (Nordic Investment Bank, 2005). Local stands exhibited clear signs of environmental stress (Fig.2). Rydval & Wilson (2012) – Water, Air, & Soil Pollution. doi:10.1007/s11270-012-1310-6 Miloš Rydval – mr268@st-andrews.ac.uk,Rob Wilson – rjsw@st-andrews.ac.uk School of Geography & Geosciences, University of St Andrews, St Andrews, United Kingdom A comparison of SO2 emissions / atmospheric concentrations with spruce and fir affected by SO2 emissions in the Bavarian Forest, Germany reveal differences in the timing of growth suppression coinciding with differing emission regimes (Fig.6). The different response of both species between the two regions reflects influence of regional factors (e.g. distance from pollution source, elevation), resulting in a complex story. Fig.3: Site chronologies together with ‘Climate’ and ‘Climate + SO2’ model results Conclusions Poor performance of the ‘Climate’ model in the prediction period indicates a period of divergence manifested as a weakening of the climate signal (Fig.3).Marked increase in agreement between modelled and actual ring-width when SO2 data are included in models. The mis-fit between actual and modelled growth post~1992 suggests no return to pre~1980 growth response despite lower pollution levels.Unlike spruce, the lower elevation (FIR) site retained a climate signal, although missing rings suggest increased and longer-term stress at this site (Fig.4). • Decreasing influence of pollution on growth suppression with increasing distance from pollution source. • Growth suppression detected in 1980 and the following decade was most likely caused by a combination of high pollution levels and adverse climatic conditions. • Distinct difference in response between Norway spruce and Silver fir. • Indication that growth response has not returned to the pre-impact state. • Difference in timing of response between Jizerské Mts. and Bavarian Forest. • Influence of pollution as a potential contributor to the ‘divergence problem’ (D’Arrigo et al. 2008)has implications for dendroclimatic reconstructions in regions affected by pollution. References: D’Arrigo, R., Wilson, R., Liepert, B., & Cherubini, P. (2008). On the ‘divergence problem’ in northern forests: a reviewof the tree-ring evidence and possible causes. Global and Planetary Change, 60, 289–305.Elling, W., Dittmar, C., Pfaffelmoser, K., & Rötzer, T. (2009). Dendroecological assessment of the complex causes of decline and recovery of the growth of silver fir (Abies alba Mill.) in Southern Germany. Forest Ecosystem Management, 257, 1175–1187.Nordic Investment Bank (2005). July Bulletin: cross-border cooperation.URL: http://www.nib.int/filebank/233-2005-1en.pdf.Accessed 15 Dec 2011. Fig.2: Example of Norway spruce ‘telephone poles’ (standing deadwood) at site 3 Fig.4: Number and percentage of missing rings in site chronologies

More Related