Acid precipitation and its effects on aquatic systems in the English Lake District


Autoria(s): Sutcliffe, D.W.
Data(s)

1983

Resumo

There is no evidence of an increase in the acidity (lower pH or alkalinity) of water-bodies in the Lake District over the last 50 years. Brown trout occur in acid streams and upland tarns where pH is 4.5-5.2 throughout the year. Their occurrence in such waters in Britain and Ireland has been known for most of this century and there is no previous evidence of harmful effects on salmonid fisheries, though numbers of fish are naturally low. However, many benthic invertebrates that are common in hill-streams where pH is above 5.7 do not occur in more acid streams. This phenomenon occurs in the headwaters of several western rivers in Cumbria. It is not a recent response to "acid rain". Harmful effects of pH are undoubtedly more pronounced in waters that are poor in other dissolved ions. Low concentrations of sodium, potassium, calcium and chloride are especially important and may limit the distributions of some aquatic animals even where pH is above 5.7. The concentration of sulphate ions is usually relatively high but this is not important to the fauna; concentrations are at least two times higher in productive alkaline water-bodies than they are in unproductive acid waters.

Formato

application/pdf

Identificador

http://aquaticcommons.org/5189/1/1983_51_sutc_acid.pdf

Sutcliffe, D.W. (1983) Acid precipitation and its effects on aquatic systems in the English Lake District. In: Fifty-first annual report for the year ended 31st March 1983. Ambleside, UK, Freshwater Biological Association, pp. 30-62. (Annual Report, Freshwater Biological Association, Ambleside)

Idioma(s)

en

Publicador

Freshwater Biological Association

Relação

http://aquaticcommons.org/5189/

Palavras-Chave #Chemistry #Ecology #Limnology
Tipo

Book Section

NonPeerReviewed