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Sediment-assisted nutrient transfer from a small, no-till, tile drained watershed in Southwestern Ontario, Canada

Bryce Molder, Jaclyn Cockburn, Aaron Berg, John Lindsay and Kathryn Woodrow

Agricultural Water Management, 2015, vol. 152, issue C, 31-40

Abstract: Sediment and nutrient exports were evaluated in a small agriculture-dominated watershed that drains into Rondeau Bay, on the northern shore of Lake Erie in Southwestern Ontario, Canada. The following hypothesis was tested: the quantity and quality of suspended sediment yields in agricultural settings controls nutrient transfer from surface runoff. Stream discharge and water quality were monitored at three locations along a tributary reach within the Rondeau Bay basin during the 2013 growing-harvest season (May–October). Water samples were analyzed in the laboratory for suspended sediment concentration, particle size, and sediment-assisted nitrogen and phosphorus content. Estimated total sediment yield over the 6-month monitoring period was ∼50t (0.13tha−1). A mid-season change in contributing sediment sources was inferred based on the observations of suspended sediment transfer and particle size following a ∼92mm rainfall event. This extreme runoff event marked a change in the discharge-suspended sediment response seen in the catchment, which included a July–September abrupt decrease in suspended sediment concentration and a coincident increase in fine-grained particle abundance. Clockwise event hysteresis suggested adjacent and/or likely channel derived sediment sources. Finally, there was a positive relationship between suspended sediment concentration and phosphorus (R2=0.86, n=63) and orthophosphate (R2=0.75, n=63). Estimated nutrient concentrations exceeded provincial load guidelines, which suggests that present land management efforts to minimize nutrient loading via surface runoff require further evaluation. This research concludes that agricultural-based nutrient loading into Lake Erie is sediment-assisted and that this sediment potentially derives from in-channel and tile drain sources. The findings have important implications for future soil loss and thus nutrient loading from agricultural settings, especially during extreme events.

Keywords: Suspended sediment transport; Nutrient transfer; Hysteresis; Extreme events; Particle size; Lake Erie (search for similar items in EconPapers)
Date: 2015
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Citations: View citations in EconPapers (3)

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Persistent link: https://EconPapers.repec.org/RePEc:eee:agiwat:v:152:y:2015:i:c:p:31-40

DOI: 10.1016/j.agwat.2014.12.010

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