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: http://eco.soil.msu.ru/intas02/
Дата изменения: Mon Jan 9 19:41:49 2012 Дата индексирования: Mon Oct 1 23:39:20 2012 Кодировка: |
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Dr. Stephen Lofts | |
Chemistry Section, Centre for Ecology and Hydrology, Lancaster Environment Centre, United Kingdom |
Dr. Michiel Rutgers, Laboratory of Ecotoxicology, National Institute for Public Health and the Environment (RIVM), The Netherlands
Dr. Natalia Naumova, Institute of Soil Science and Agrochemistry (ISSA), Russian Academy of Sciences, Siberian Branch, Russia.
Dr. Tatiana Pampura, Institute of Physicochemical and Biological Problems in Soil Science (IPBPSS), Russian Academy of Sciences, Russia.
Dr. Galina Koptsik, Soil Science Faculty, Moscow State University, Russia.
Dr. Serguei Koptsik, Physics Faculty, Moscow State University, Russia.
Dr. Natalia Lukina, Institute of Industrial Ecological Problems of the North (INEP), Russian Academy of Sciences, Russia.
For addresses of contact persons see below
Background:
Toxic heavy metal pollutants can cause great harm to terrestrial ecosystems. Effective
policy to manage and reduce potentially harmful levels of metals to such systems requires a
thorough scientific knowledge of the impacts of such metals. The main study area will be the
Kola Peninsula region, which is heavily impacted by aerial emissions from the nickel-processing
industry, specifically the Pechenganikel and Severonikel smelters which are the largest
point-source emitters of sulphur and heavy metals (particularly nickel and copper) in Northern
Europe. Emissions over the last few decades have caused severe damage to the boreal forests of
the area, which are among the northernmost coniferous forests of the world and hence may be
especially sensitive to pollution impact. A study centred on Luvic Phaeozem soils of the Moscow
region (Pushchino) will also be included in the project. The focus of this work will be to link
short-term (months) and long-term (years) microbial community dynamics and pollutant tolerance
with varying levels of metal (lead) contamination.
Concentrations of heavy metals (nickel and copper) will be studied in soil profiles along two transects surrounding nickel smelters in the Kola Peninsula. Total and available soil metal, soil solution metal, and soil solution free ion activity (for copper) will be determined, along with the major chemical constituents of the soil and soil solution. Chemical speciation modelling will be used to relate soil solids and solution chemistry, and transfer functions relating solid and solution metals will be determined. Community-level microbial indicators including biomass, metabolic quotient, structural and metabolic (functional) diversity, and pollution tolerance, will be measured in the soils. Relationships between the chemical and microbial properties of the soils will be established.
Microbial biomass and metabolic quotient, and soil solution chemistry, in a suite of Pushchino soils artificially contaminated with lead, will be studied over a period of 2-3 years following contamination. Metabolic and functional diversity and pollution tolerance will be measured after a period of 2-3 years. Relationships between soil metal levels, soil solution chemistry and microbial properties will be established.
Metal (Cu, Ni) adsorption properties of Kola soils will be studied in detail. The results will be used to derive empirical transfer functions for solid-solution metal partitioning, and to calibrate a chemical speciation model of the partitioning process. Soil column experiments will be carried out using soil profiles from two Kola sites. Columns will be irrigated with solutions mimicking contaminated and uncontaminated precipitation of the region. Field measurements of precipitation and soil water chemistry will be made over three summers. A dynamic model of topsoil chemistry will be developed, combining a solute transport code and both a chemical speciation model and empirical transfer functions for metal partitioning. The model will be parameterised with the results of the metal adsorption and column experiments, and tested against the measurements of soil water chemistry.
Dr. Stephen Lofts | Centre for Ecology and Hydrology The Ferry House, Ambleside Cumbria LA22 0LP, UK Tel: 44 (0) 15394 87702 Fax: 44 (0)15394 46914 E-mail: stlo@ceh.ac.uk |
Dr. Galina Koptsik | Soil Science Faculty, Moscow State University Moscow 119899, Russia Tel: +7 495 939 3573 Fax: +7 495 939 0989 E-mail: koptsikg@mail.ru |
Dr. Serguei Koptsik | Faculty of Physics, Moscow State University Moscow 119892, Russia Tel: +7 495 939 1145 Fax: +7 495 939 5907 E-mail: koptsik@phys.msu.ru |
Address of this page: http://soil.msu.ru/projects/intas02/