Premium
Nitrogen Balance in and Export from an Agricultural Watershed
Author(s) -
David Mark B.,
Gentry Lowell E.,
Kovacic David A.,
Smith Karen M.
Publication year - 1997
Publication title -
journal of environmental quality
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.888
H-Index - 171
eISSN - 1537-2537
pISSN - 0047-2425
DOI - 10.2134/jeq1997.00472425002600040015x
Subject(s) - tile drainage , watershed , loam , hydrology (agriculture) , mollisol , environmental science , drainage , surface water , tile , agronomy , soil water , environmental engineering , soil science , geology , geography , ecology , biology , geotechnical engineering , archaeology , machine learning , computer science
Surface water nitrate (NO − 3 ) pollution from agricultural production is well established, although few studies have linked field N budgets, NO − 3 loss in tile drained watersheds, and surface water NO − 3 loads. This study was conducted to determine field sources, transport, and river export of NO − 3 from an agricultural watershed. The Embarras River watershed at Camargo (48 173 ha) in east‐central Illinois was investigated. The watershed is a tile‐drained area of fertile Mollisols (typical soil is Drummer silty clay loam, a fine‐silty, mixed mesic Typic Haplaquoll) with primary cropping of maize ( Zea mays L.) and soybean ( Glycine max L.). Agricultural field N sources and sinks, tile drainage NO − 3 concentrations and fluxes, and river NO − 3 export were estimated for the entire watershed. Large pools of inorganic N were present following each harvest of maize and soybean (average of 3670 Mg N yr −1 over a 6‐yr period). The source of most of the inorganic N was divided between N fertilizer and soil mineralized N. High concentrations of NO − 3 were found in four monitored drainage tiles (5–49 mg N L −1 ), and tile concentrations of NO − 3 were synchronous with Embarras River NO − 3 concentrations. High flow events contributed most of the yearly NO − 3 loss (24.7 kg N ha −1 yr −1 ) from tile drained fields in the 1995 water year (1 Oct. 1994 through 30 Sept. 1995) where high rainfall events occurred in a low overall precipitation year (in one tile 21% of the annual load was exported in 1 d). During the 1996 water year, NO − 3 export in tiles was much higher (44.2 kg N ha −1 yr −1 ) due to greater precipitation, and individual days were less important. On average, about 49% (average of 1688 Mg N yr −1 over a 6‐yr period) of the field inorganic N pool was estimated to be leached through drain tiles and seepage and was exported by the Embarras River, although depending on weather and field N balances this ranged from 25 to 85% of the field N balance over the 6‐yr period. It seems likely that agricultural disturbance (high mineralization inputs of N) and N fertilization combined with tile drainage contributed significantly to NO − 3 export in the Embarras River.