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Chemistry of Aquatic Systems: Local and Global Perspectives PDF

534 Pages·1994·16.29 MB·English
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Chemistry of Aquatic Systems: Local and Global Perspectives EURO COURSES A series devoted to the publication of courses and educational seminars organized by the Joint Research Centre lspra, as part of its education and training program. Published for the Commission of the European Communities, Directorate General Telecommunications, Information Industries and Innovation, Scientific and Technical Communications Service. The EUROCOURSES consist of the following subseries: Advanced Scientific Techniques - Chemical and Environmental Science Energy Systems and Technology - Environmental Impact Assessment - Environmental Management Health Physics and Radiation Protection Computer and Information Science - Mechanical and Materials Science - Nuclear Science and Technology Reliability and Risk Analysis Remote Sensing Technological Innovation CHEMICAL AND ENVIRONMENTAL SCIENCE Volume 5 The publisher will accept continuation orders for this series which may be cancelled at any time and which provide for automatic billing and shipping of each tiUe in the series upon publication. Please write for details. Chemistry of Aquatic Systems: Local and Global Perspectives Edited by Giovanni Bidoglio Commission of the·European Communities, Joint Research Centre, Environment Institute, lspra, Italy and Werner Stumm Swiss Federal Institute for Environmental Science and Technology, EAWAG, DIJbendorf, Switzerland '~·' SPRINGER-SCIENCE+BUSINESS MEDIA, B.V. Based on the lectures given during the Eurocourse on 'Chemistry of Aquatic Systems: Local and Global Perspectives' held at the Joint Research Centre, lspra, ltaly, September 27-0ctober 1, 1993 Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data Chellstry of aquatlc syste1s local and global perspecttves 1 ed1ted by Gtovannl 8\dogllo and Werner Stu11. p. CI. -- (Eurocourses. Che•lcal and envlron•ental science : v. 5) "Based an the lectures g\ven durlng the Eurocourse on 'CheiiJStry of Aquatlc Syste•s: Local and Global Perspecttves, · held at the ..Jo lnt Research Centre lspra, It a 1y . Septe1ber 27-0ctober 1. 1993. " Inc ludes index. ISBN 978-90-481-4410-5 ISBN 978-94-017-1024-4 (eBook) DOI 10.1007/978-94-017-1024-4 1. Water cheiiStry--Congresses. I. Bldogllo, GlovannJ. II. Stu••· Herner, 1924- . III. Ser1es: Euro courses. Chelllcal and envlron•ental sclence : v. 5. GB855.C48 1994 551. 48--dc20 94-15441 ISBN 978-90-481-4410-5 Publication arrangements by Commission of the European Communities Directorate-General Telecommunications, lnformation Industrias and lnnovation, Scientific and Technical Communication Unit, Luxembourg EUR 15632 © 1994 Springer Science+Business Media Dordrecht Originally published by Kluwer Academic Publishers in 1994 LEGAL NOTICE Neither the Commission of the European Communities nor any person acting on behalf of the Commission is responsible for the use which might be made of the following information. Printed on acid-free paper Ali Rights Reserved No part of the material protected by this copyright notice may be reproduced or utilized in any form or by any means, electronic or mechanical, including photocopying, recording or by any information storage and retrieval system, without written permission from the copyright owner. CONTENTS Preface ............................................................................................................................................... vii Contributors .................................................................................................................................... ix I. Atmosphere· Rock· Water Interactions 1. Acquisition of Solutes and Regulation of the Composition of Natural Waters ....... 1 Werner Stumm 2. Regulation of Drainage Water Composition by Biotic Processes in Terrestrial Ecosystems ............................................................................................................................... 33 Nico van Breemen 3. Aquatic Carbonate Systems: Chemical Processes in Natural Waters and Global Cycles........................................................................................................................................ 47 R. WollastandJ.P. Vanderborght 4. Modeling of Heterogeneous Chemistry in the Global Troposphere ........................... 73 los Lelieveld ll. Metals, Nutrients and Organic Carbon 5. Biogeochemistry of Organic Matter in Coastal Ocean Waters .................................... 97 G. Cauwet and A. Saliot 6. Microbial Transformation of Metals in Relation to the Biogeochemical Cycle ...... 121 F. Baldi 7. Metal Speciation: Concepts, Analysis and Effects ......................................................... 153 Laura Sigg and Hanbin Xue 8. Light-Induced Processes in the Aquatic Environment ................................................... 183 Barbara Sulzberger and Stephan I. Hug 9. Trace Metal/Phytoplankton Interactions in the Sea........................................................ 213 William G. Sunda 10. Optical Remote Sensing of Marine Ecosystems: Bio-Geochemical Implications of Ocean Colour, Marine Productivity and Atmospheric Interactions ....................... 249 C.N. Murray and V. Barale vi ill. The Solid-Water Interface 11. Reactions at the Mineral-Water Interface ......................................................................... 273 L. Charlet 12. Surface Processes in Water Technology ........................................................................... 307 Steven A. Banwart IV. Transformation, Degradation and Transport of Pollutants. Spatial and Temporal Scaling 13. Sources and Reactivity ofReductants Encountered in Aquatic Environments........ 337 Alan T. Stone, Kathy L. Godtfredsen and Baolin Deng 14. Abiotic Transfonnation Pathways of Organic Chemicals in Aquatic Ecosystems . 375 Eric 1. Weber 15. Coupled Processes in Reaction-Flow Transport of Contaminants .............................. 403 Giovanni Bidoglio 16. Scale Effects in the Transport of Contaminants in Natural Media ............................. 433 Ph. Behra 17. Modeling the Hydrologic and Biogeochemical Response of a Catchment Area to Anthropogenic Inputs ....................................................................................................... 465 Tomas Paces 18. Spectral Properties of Soils and the Use of Optical Remote Sensing Systems for Soil Erosion Mapping ............................................................................................................ 497 Joachim Hill Index.................................................................................................................................................. 527 PREFACE Aquatic systems play a salient role in the complex processes of energy and matter exchange between the geosphere and the atmosphere. For example, reactions taking place in cloud water droplets can substantially alter the atmospheric budget and chemistry of trace gases; pollution induced weathering reactions at water/soil interfaces can affect the availability of nutrients and increase the concentration of potentially toxic metals in groundwaters. Moreover, the inextricable links between the water cycle, the geosphere and the atmosphere ensure that apparently localized environmental problems have increasingly impacts in other parts of the world. To identify local-to-global scale variables associated with environmental changes, a focus must be placed on the recognition of processes, rather than a continued reliance on monitoring state variables. However, in heterogeneous aquatic systems, small scale aspects of a process under observation may not be summed directly to obtain regional estimates because of process nonlinearities with change in scale. To understand this, the integrated use of measurements across a range of scales is required. The objectives of this book are: 1) to illustrate how land, water and atmosphere are coupled by hydrogeochemical cycles and how these cycles influence the chemistry of natural waters; 2) to strengthen our understanding of the cycling of nutrients, metals and organic carbon in marine and lacustrine systems; 3) to give an account of current research and water technological applications of the processes occurring at the solid water interface; 4) to illustrate how pollutants are transformed, degraded and transported, and how to link processes occurring at different levels of space and time. This is a teaching book. The authors are aquatic chemists, chemical and environmental engineers, atmospheric scientists, and soil chemists; they have written their chapters in such a way as to assist the readers (students, geochemists, water and soil scientists, environmental engineers) in understanding general principles. The book progresses from theoretical models and laboratory systems to application in natural water, soil and geochemical systems, concentrating on understanding the processes that regulate the distribution, concentration and fate of reactive elements and pollutants. Selected examples of the relationships between microscopic-scale phenomena and changes in geochemical cycles are illustrated with reference to remote sensing observations. Emphasis is on stimulating innovative research on aquatic systems and promoting the interaction among environmental researchers. Credits for the creation of this volume is, of course, primarily due to its authors. December, 1993 Giovanni Bidoglio- Ispra Werner Stumm - Zurich vii CONTRIBUTORS F. BAWl, Department of Environmental Biology, University of Siena, Siena, Italy. STEVEN A. BANWART, Department of Inorganic Chemistry, The Royal Institute of Technology, Stockholm, Sweden. V. BARALE, Institute of Remote Sensing Applications, Joint Research Centre, Commission of the European Communities, Ispra, Italy. Ph. BEHRA, Institut de Mecanique des Fluides, Universite Louis Pasteur, Strasbourg, France. GIOVANNI BIDOGUO, Environment Institute, Joint Research Centre, Commission of the European Communities, Ispra, Italy. NICO VAN BREEMEN, Department of Soil Science and Geology, Wageningen Agricultural University, Wageningen, The Netherlands. G. CAUWET, Groupement de Recherches "Interactions Continent-Ocean", Centre National de la Recherche Scientifique, Universite de Perpignan, Perpignan, France. L. CHARLET, Environmental Geochemistry Group, University Joseph Fourier, Grenoble, France. BAOUN DENG, Department of Geography and Environmental Engineering, The Johns Hopkins University, Baltimore, Maryland, USA. KATHY L. GODTFREDSEN, Department of Geography and Environmental Engineering, The Johns Hopkins University, Baltimore, Maryland, USA. JOACHIM HILL, Institute of Remote Sensing Applications, Joint Research Centre, Commission of the European Communities, Ispra, Italy. STEPHAN I. HUG, Swiss Federal Institute for Environmental Science and Technology, EA WAG, Diibendorf, Switzerland. lOS LEUEVEW, Air Quality Department, Wageningen Agricultural University, Wageningen, The Netherlands. C.N. MURRAY, Institute of Remote Sensing Applications, Joint Research Centre, Commission of the European Communities, Ispra, Italy. TOMAS PACES, Department of Geochemistry, Czech Geological Survey, Praha, Czech Republic. ix X A. SAUOT, Laboratoire de Physique et Chimie Marines, Universit~ Pierre et Marie Curie, Paris, France. LAURA SIGG, Swiss Federal Institute for Environmental Science and Technology, EAWAG, Diibendorf, Switzerland. ALAN T. STONE, Department of Geography and Environmental Engineering, The Johns Hopkins University, Baltimore, Maryland, USA. WERNER STUMM, Swiss Federal Institute for Environmental Science and Technology, EAW AG, Diibendorf, Switzerland. BARBARA SULZBERGER, Swiss Federal Institute for Environmental Science and Technology, EA WAG, Diibendorf, Switzerland. WILUAM G. SUNDA, Beaufort Laboratory, National Marine Fisheries Service, NOAA, Beaufort, North Carolina, U.S.A. J.P. VANDERBORGHT, Laboratory of Chemical Oceanography, University of Brussels, Brussels, Belgium. ERIC 1. WEBER, U.S. Environmental Protection Agency, Environmental Research Laboratory, Athens, Georgia, U.S.A. R. WOLLAST, Laboratory of Chemical Oceanography, University of Brussels, Brussels, Belgium. HANBIN XUE, Swiss Federal Institute for Environmental Science and Technology, EA WAG, Diibendorf, Switzerland.

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