Publishing House SB RAS:

Publishing House SB RAS:

Address of the Publishing House SB RAS:
Morskoy pr. 2, 630090 Novosibirsk, Russia



Advanced Search

Geography and Natural Resources

2023 year, number 3

Soil transformation along the coast of Baikal due to lake level fluctuations (Irkutsk oblast)

I.A. BELOZERTSEVA, I.B. VOROBYEVA, N.V. VLASOVA
V.B. Sochava Institute of Geography, Siberian Branch, Russian Academy of Sciences, Irkutsk, Russia
Keywords: soils, hydrogenation, environmental damage, water discharges, Irkutsk Hydroelectric Power Plant

Abstract

As a result of soil-geochemical studies, we determined the degree of hydrogenic transformation of soils on the most developed and periodically flooded territories of the western and southern coast of Lake Baikal. Indicators were selected and a scale was proposed for a point assessment of hydrogenic transformation of soils and soil cover. The following indicators were used as indicators of hydrogenic transformation of soils and soil cover: morphological signs of hydromorphism; soil pollution; reduction of physical clay content; increased area of exposed soil-forming and underlying rock; reduction of humus reserves; the area of natural forage land and arable land removed from land use, and others. An assessment is made of the environmental damage caused to the soil cover of the coastal area as a result of the influence of fluctuations in the lake level. It was revealed that most of the key areas of the western coast of Lake Baikal are characterized by an average degree of soil transformation. A high degree of soil transformation is noted at the mouths of the Goloustnaya and Anga Rivers, on the coast of the Gulf of Shida and Lake Ulan-Khan. On most of the study territory of the southern coast of Baikal (the mouth of the Snezhnaya, Utulik, Pokhabikha and Kultuk Rivers), a high degree of transformation of soil cover was established, where anthropogenic impact is also observed. In all periodically flooded soils of the lake coast, geomorphological signs of hydromorphism are observed, and in some areas there occur processes of increasing the fraction of physical sand, sediment from organic remains of dead vegetation, a decrease and increase in humus reserves, a decrease in the area of forage land. Increased concentrations of petroleum products and some heavy metals were detected in the soils of the estuaries of the southern coast of Lake Baikal. The soils of most of the key areas are characterized by low levels of plant nutrients.