After years of adverse impacts to the acid-sensitive ecosystems of the eastern United States, the Acid Rain Program and Nitrogen Budget Program were developed to control sulfur dioxide (SO2) and nitrogen oxide (NOx) emissions through market-based cap and trade systems. We used data from the National Atmospheric Deposition Program's National Trends Network (NTN) and the U.S. EPA Temporally Integrated Monitoring of Ecosystems (TIME) program to evaluate the response of lake-watersheds in the Adirondack region of New York to changes in emissions of sulfur dioxide and nitrogen oxides resulting from the Acid Rain Program and the Nitrogen Budget Program. TIME is a long-term monitoring program designed to sample statistically selected subpopulations of lakes and streams across the eastern U.S. to quantify regional trends in surface water chemistry due to changes in atmospheric deposition. Decreases in wet sulfate deposition for the TIME lake-watersheds from 1991 to 2007 (-1.04 meq m(-2)-yr) generally corresponded with decreases in estimated lake sulfate flux (-1.46 +/- 0.72 meq m(-2)-yr), suggesting declines in lake sulfate were largely driven by decreases in atmospheric deposition. Decreases in lake sulfate and to a lesser extent nitrate have generally coincided with increases in acid neutralizing capacity (ANC) resulting in shifts in lakes among ANC sensitivity classes. The percentage of acidic Adirondack lakes (ANC <0 mu eg L-1) decreased from 15.5% (284 lakes) to 8.3% (152 lakes) since the implementation of the Acid Rain Program and the Nitrogen Budget Program. Two measures of ANC were considered in our analysis: ANC determined directly by Gran plot analysis (ANC(G)) and ANC calculated by major ion chemistry (ANC(calc) = C-B - C-A). While these two metrics should theoretically show similar responses, ANC(calc) (+2.03 mu eq L-1-yr) increased at more than twice the rate as ANC(G) (+0.76 mu eq L-1-yr). This discrepancy has important implications for assessments of lake recovery and appears to be due to compensatory increases in concentrations of naturally occurring organic acids coincident with decreases in lake concentrations of strong acid anions, as evidenced by increases in concentrations of dissolved organic carbon. (C) 2011 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.
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Aber JD, 2003, BIOSCIENCE, V53, P375, DOI 10.1641/0006-3568(2003)053[0375:INDATN]2.0.CO
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New York State Dept Environm Conservat, Div Air Resources, Albany, NY 12233 USANew York State Dept Environm Conservat, Div Air Resources, Albany, NY 12233 USA
Civerolo, Kevin L.
Roy, Karen M.
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New York State Dept Environm Conservat, Div Air Resources, Ray Brook, NY 12977 USANew York State Dept Environm Conservat, Div Air Resources, Albany, NY 12233 USA
Roy, Karen M.
Stoddard, John L.
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US EPA, Western Ecol Div, Natl Hlth & Environm Effects Res Lab, Corvallis, OR 97333 USANew York State Dept Environm Conservat, Div Air Resources, Albany, NY 12233 USA
Stoddard, John L.
Sistla, Gopal
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New York State Dept Environm Conservat, Div Air Resources, Albany, NY 12233 USANew York State Dept Environm Conservat, Div Air Resources, Albany, NY 12233 USA
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New York State Dept Environm Conservat, Div Air Resources, Albany, NY 12233 USANew York State Dept Environm Conservat, Div Air Resources, Albany, NY 12233 USA
Civerolo, Kevin L.
Roy, Karen M.
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New York State Dept Environm Conservat, Div Air Resources, Ray Brook, NY 12977 USANew York State Dept Environm Conservat, Div Air Resources, Albany, NY 12233 USA
Roy, Karen M.
Stoddard, John L.
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US EPA, Western Ecol Div, Natl Hlth & Environm Effects Res Lab, Corvallis, OR 97333 USANew York State Dept Environm Conservat, Div Air Resources, Albany, NY 12233 USA
Stoddard, John L.
Sistla, Gopal
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New York State Dept Environm Conservat, Div Air Resources, Albany, NY 12233 USANew York State Dept Environm Conservat, Div Air Resources, Albany, NY 12233 USA