Biogeochemical investigations at the watershed, landscape, and regional scales : refereed papers from BIOGEOMON, the Third International Symposium on Ecosystem Behavior : co-sponsored by Villanova University and the Czech Geological Survey, held at Villanova University, Villanova, Pennsylvania, USA, June 21-25, 1997

Bibliographic Information

Biogeochemical investigations at the watershed, landscape, and regional scales : refereed papers from BIOGEOMON, the Third International Symposium on Ecosystem Behavior : co-sponsored by Villanova University and the Czech Geological Survey, held at Villanova University, Villanova, Pennsylvania, USA, June 21-25, 1997

edited by R. Kelman Wieder, Martin Novák and Jiří Černý

Kluwer Academic, c1998

Available at  / 3 libraries

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Note

"Reprinted from Water, air, and soil pollution 105 (1-2), 1998."

Includes bibliographical references

Description and Table of Contents

Description

This Special Issue of Water, Air, and Soil Pollution offers original contributions from BIOGEOMON, The Third International Symposium on Ecosystem Behavior, which was held on the campus ofVillanova University from June 21-25, 1997. Previous meetings were held in Prague in 1987 and again in 1993. The BIOGEOMON series was initiated in 1987 when a group of researchers from the Czech Geological Survey organized a conference called GEOMON, Geochemical Monitoring in Representative Basins. GEOMON was fairly narrowly focused on monitoring of element pools and fluxes on a small watershed scale. As signalled by the change in name to BIOGEOMON, the second conference explicitly recognized that assessment of anthropogenic effects on ecosystem processes requires a combination of geochemical monitoring with other approaches, including watershed-level manipulations, use of radioactive and stable isotopic tracers, and both empirical and process modeling. The 1997 BIOGEOMON conference was the largest, with over 240 participants from 28 countries on five continents in attendance, and broadest in scope. The conference featured a plenary speaker, six keynote speakers, 35 invited speakers, over 60 oral contributed presentations, and over 75 poster presentations.

Table of Contents

  • Integrated Assessment of Soil Chemical Status. 1. Integration of Existing Models and Derivation of a Regional Database for Switzerland
  • M. Alveteg, et al. Integrated Assessment of Soil Chemical Status. 2. Application of a Regionalized Model to 622 Forested Sites in Switzerland
  • D. Kurz, et al. MAGIC, SAFE and SMART Model Applications at Integrated Monitoring Sites: Effects of Emission Reduction Scenarios
  • M. Forsius, et al. Predicting Freshwater Critical Loads of Acidification at the Catchment Scale: An Empirical Model
  • M.R. Kernan, et al. Evidence of Current Soil Acidification in Spruce Stands in the Vosges Mountains, North-Eastern France
  • E. Dambrine, et al. A Comparison of Soil Sensitivity to Acidification Based on Laboratory-determined Short-Term Acid Buffering Capacity and the Skokloster Classification
  • M.E. Hodson, et al. Proton Budgets of Forest Ecosystems on Volcanogenous Regosols in Hokkaido, Northern Japan
  • H. Shibata, et al. GIS Analysis of Surface Water Chemistry Susceptibility and Response to Industrial Air Pollution in the Kola Peninsula, Northern Russia
  • O. Rigina. Effects of Atmospheric Sea-salt Deposition on Soils and Freshwaters in Northeast Scotland
  • C.C. White, et al. Acidification of Freshwater Wetlands: Combined Effects of Non-airborne Sulfur Pollution and Desiccation
  • L.P.M. Lamers, et al. Trace Gas Emissions from a North Wales Fen - Role of Hydrochemistry and Soil Enzyme Activity
  • H. Kang, et al. Estimating Rainy Season Nitrous Oxide and Methane Fluxes Across Forest and Pasture Landscapes in Costa Rica
  • W.A. Reiners, et al. GIS-based Extrapolation of Land Use-Related Nitrous Oxide Flux in the Atlantic Zone of Costa Rica
  • R.A.J. Plant. Synthesis of Nitrogen Pools and Fluxes from European Forest Ecosystems
  • N.B. Dise, et al. The Behavior of Nitrogen Isotopes in Acidified Forest Soils in the Czech Republic
  • F. Buzek, et al. Canopy and Soil Retention of Nitrogen Deposition in a Mixed Boreal Forest in Eastern Finland
  • S. Piirainen, et al. Effects of Chronic Nitrogen Amendments on Production of Dissolved Organic Carbon and Nitrogen in Forest Soils
  • W.H. McDowell, et al. Effect of Chronic Nitrogen Additions on Soil Nitrogen Fractions in Red Spruce Stands
  • M.B. David, et al. An Empirical Approach for Assessing the Relationship Between Nitrogen Deposition and Nitrate Leaching from Upland Catchments in the United Kingdom Using Runoff Chemistry
  • R. Harriman, et al. The Prediction of Nitrate Leaching with the First-Order Acidity Balance (FAB) Model for Upland Catchment in Great Britain
  • C.J. Curtis, et al. Nitrogen and Sulfate Export from High Elevation Catchments of the Sierra Nevada, California
  • J.O. Sickman, J.M. Melack. Links Between Runoff Generation, Climate and Nitrate-N Leaching from Forested Catchments
  • L. Andersson, A. Lepistoe. Leaching of Nutrients, Organic Carbon and Iron from Finnish Forestry Land
  • P. Kortelainen, S. Saukkonen. Precipitation Change and Soil Leaching: Field Results and Simulations from Walker Branch Watershed, Tennessee
  • D.W. Johnson, et al. Tracing Hydrologic Pathways Using Chloride at the Panola Mountain Research Watershed, Georgia, USA
  • N.E. Peters, E.B. Ratcliffe. A Comparison of Methods for Deriving Solute Flux Rates Using Long-Term Data from Streams in the Mirror Lake Watershed
  • P.A. Bukaveckas, et al. Effect of Altitude and Tree Species on 34s of Deposited Sulfur (Jeze i Catchment, Czech Republic)
  • H. Groscheova, et al. Organic Sulfur and the Retention of Nutrient Cations in Forest Surface Soils
  • H.G. Spratt Jr. Recovery of Surface Waters in the Northeastern U.S. From Decreases in Atmospheric

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