4.7 Article

Characterizing solute budgets of a tropical Andean paramo ecosystem

Journal

SCIENCE OF THE TOTAL ENVIRONMENT
Volume 835, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

ELSEVIER
DOI: 10.1016/j.scitotenv.2022.155560

Keywords

Solute fluxes; Solute loads; Sampling frequency; Water quality; paramo; Tropics

Funding

  1. Ecuadorian Secretary of Higher Education, Science, Technology and Innovation (SENESCYT) in the framework of the project Desarrollo de Indicadores Hidrologicos Funcionales para la Evaluacion del Impacto del Cambio Global en Ecosistemas Andinos
  2. IAEA research contract in the framework of the project Evaluation of Non-Stationary Hydrological Conditions in the Andean Paramo [22906]

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Monitoring solute fluxes in a pristine tropical Andean paramo catchment revealed potential threats to water quality. Analysis of 24 solutes showed that Dissolved Organic Carbon (DOC), Total Nitrogen bound (TNb), Si, Ca, Mg, K, and Na had the highest input and export rates.
Monitoring solute fluxes in water quality studies is essential to reveal potential ecosystem disturbances, and is particularly important in Andean headwater catchments as they are the main sources of water for downstream populations. However, such studies have mainly focused on organic matter and nutrients, disregarding other solutes that can threaten water quality (e.g. arsenic, lead, calcium or magnesium). Additionally, routine low-resolution (weekly or monthly) sampling schemes may overlook important solute dynamics. Therefore, we collected water samples every four hours for the analysis of twenty-four solutes in a pristine tropical Andean paramo catchment. Solute fluxes were calculated using five different methods. The 4-hourly data set was filtered to test for an optimum sampling frequency without compromising export rates. Based on the available 4-hourly data, the results showed that the interpolation export method was best suited, due to a weak correlation with discharges. Of the twenty-four solutes analyzed, Dissolved Organic Carbon (DOC), Total Nitrogen bound (TNb), Si, Ca, Mg, K, and Na presented the highest input rates (with DOC = 4.167E+08 mEq km(-2) yr(-1) and Si = 1.729E+07 mEq km(-2) yr(-1)) and export rates (with DOC = 2.686E+08 mEq km(-2) yr(-1) and Si = 2.953E+08 mEq km(-2) yr(-1)). Moreover, DOC, TNb, NH4-N, NO2-N, NO3-N, PO4, Al, B, Cu, Fe, Zn, As, Cd, Cr, Pb, and V presented more input than export, while Ca, K, Mg, Na, Rb, Si, Sr, and Ba presented more export than input (geogenic sources). Filtered sampling frequencies demonstrated that a minimum of daily grab samples would be required to obtain reliable export rates with differences consistently below 10%, when compared to the 4-hourly solute export. These findings can be particularly useful for the implementation of long-term monitoring programs at lowcost, and they provide high-quality information, for the first time, on biogeochemical budgets in a pristine paramo catchment.

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