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Long-term Trends in Surface Water Quality of Five Lakes in Japan
Authors:T Yamada  T Inoue  H Fukuhara  O Nakahara  T Izuta  R Suda  M Takahashi  H Sase  A Takahashi  H Kobayashi  T Ohizumi  T Hakamata
Institution:(1) Water Supply Engineering, National Institute of Public Health, Wako 351-0197, Japan;(2) Department of Architecture and Civil Engineering, Toyohashi University of Technology, Toyohashi 441-8580, Japan;(3) Niigata University, Niigata, Japan;(4) Hokkaido University, Sapporo, Japan;(5) Tokyo University of Agriculture and Technology, Fuchu, Tokyo, Japan;(6) Fukuoka Institute of Health and Environmental Sciences, Dazaifu, Japan;(7) Forestry and Forest Products Research Institute, Tsukuba, Japan;(8) Acid Deposition and Oxidant Research Center, Niigata, Japan;(9) HORIBA, Ltd., Kyoto, Japan;(10) Hamamatsu Photonics, K.K., Tsukuba, Japan
Abstract:Since 1983, the Ministry of the Environment of Japan has conducted nation-wide acid deposition surveys. To investigate the effects of acid deposition on surface water, we used the nonparametric Mann–Kendall test to find temporal trends in pH, alkalinity, and electrical conductivity (EC) in more than 10 years of data collected from five lakes and their catchments (Lake Kuttara: northernmost; Lake Kamakita: near Tokyo; Lake Ijira: central; Lake Banryu: western; and Lake Unagiike: southernmost). The pH of Lake Ijira water has declined slightly since the mid-1990s, corresponding with the downward trends seen in the pH and alkalinity of the river water flowing into the lake. There were significant upward trends in the EC of both the lake and stream water; the same trends were also found for $$ {\text{NO}}^{ - }_{3} $$ concentrations. These trends show evidence of acidification due to atmospheric deposition, and this is the first such finding in Japan based on significant long-term trends. Lake Ijira is located about 40 km north of the Chukyo industrial area near Nagoya. The annual depositions of H+, nss-$$ {\text{SO}}^{{2 - }}_{4} $$, and $$ {\text{NO}}^{ - }_{3} $$ in Lake Ijira were among the highest of all deposition monitoring sites, suggesting that this is the main cause of the significant acidification observed in Lake Ijira. No significant trends suggesting acidification were observed in any of the other lake catchments in spite of the significant upward trends in EC. Upward trends in pH and alkalinity at Lake Banryu and upward trends in alkalinity at Lake Kamakita were detected, but no change in pH or alkalinity at Lake Kuttara and Lake Unagiike was observed.
Keywords:acidification  catchment  long-term trend  surface water  water quality
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