Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
6410767 | Journal of Hydrology | 2015 | 11 Pages |
â¢We conducted column experiments simulating salinization and freshening events.â¢We show the change of nutrient concentrations and isotope composition of nitrate.â¢Phosphate is affected by anion exchange due to salinization and freshening events.â¢Seawater intrusion leads to decrease of N:P ratio.
SummaryThis study experimentally quantified the effect of seawater intrusion (salinization) and freshening events in coastal aquifers on nutrient (N, P and DSi) dynamics across the fresh-saline groundwater interface. Laboratory column experiments were conducted under aerobic and anaerobic conditions in order to simulate the processes occurring in the fresh-saline interface. They were performed with aquifer sediments, simulating the natural conditions during alterations of natural fresh groundwater to seawater and vice versa. The salinization and freshening experiments showed that NH4+ and PO43â and DSi were affected mainly by ion exchange processes while microbial activity controlled the nitrogen species NO3â and NO2â. Due to the cation exchange, salinization generated enrichment (above the expected conservative behavior) of NH4+, up to 80 μmol Lâ1 (an order of magnitude higher than in seawater or fresh groundwater). Under anaerobic conditions NO3â was removed by denitrification, as demonstrated by the decrease in NO3â concentrations, the increase in NO2â concentrations, and the increase in δ15N by 15-25â°. Clear evidence was shown for anion exchange of PO43â, which competes with HCO3â and boron on adsorption sites. DSi seems to take part in the exchange process, similar to PO43â.