4.6 Article

Impact of vegetation harvesting on nutrient removal and plant biomass quality in wetland buffer zones

Journal

HYDROBIOLOGIA
Volume 848, Issue 14, Pages 3273-3289

Publisher

SPRINGER
DOI: 10.1007/s10750-020-04256-4

Keywords

Riparian wetlands; Buffer zones; Non-point source water pollution; Fertilisers; Eutrophication; Nutrient capture by plants

Funding

  1. European Union under the ERA-NET Cofund WaterWorks2015 Call
  2. Innovation Fund Denmark (Denmark) under the ERA-NET Cofund WaterWorks2015 Call
  3. Federal Ministry of Food and Agriculture (Germany) under the ERA-NET Cofund WaterWorks2015 Call
  4. National Centre for Research and Development (Poland) under the ERA-NET Cofund WaterWorks2015 Call
  5. European Union from the European Regional Development Fund under the Operational Programme Innovative Economy, 2007-2013

Ask authors/readers for more resources

The study found that harvesting vegetation within wetland buffer zones can increase nitrogen removal efficiency while potentially increasing the decomposability of biomass, facilitating the recycling of nutrients. Therefore, biomass should be removed after mowing to maintain high levels of nitrogen and phosphorus removal efficiency.
Fertiliser use in agriculture increases the non-point pollution of waters with nitrogen (N) and phosphorus (P). Wetland buffer zones (WBZs) are wetland ecosystems between agricultural lands and water bodies that protect surface waters from non-point source pollution. We assessed how vegetation harvesting within WBZs impacts their N and P removal efficiency, nutrient uptake by plants and their biomass quality. We surveyed vegetation of a spontaneously rewetted fen along a small river in Poland, and analysed plant biomass, its nutrient contents and nutrient-leaching potential and the water chemistry. Total N removal reached 34-92% and total P removal 17-63%. N removal was positively related to the initial N concentration, regardless of mowing status. We found a high N removal efficiency (92%) in the harvested site. Vegetation of mown sites differed from that of unmown sites by a higher water-leached carbon and P contents in the biomass. We found that vegetation harvesting may stimulate the overall N removal, but may increase potential biomass decomposability, which eases the recycling of plant-incorporated nutrients back to WBZ. Thus, mowing should always be followed by the removal of biomass. Neglecting already mown WBZs may temporarily lower their nutrient removal efficiency due to potentially faster decomposition of plant biomass.

Authors

I am an author on this paper
Click your name to claim this paper and add it to your profile.

Reviews

Primary Rating

4.6
Not enough ratings

Secondary Ratings

Novelty
-
Significance
-
Scientific rigor
-
Rate this paper

Recommended

No Data Available
No Data Available