4.7 Article

The ability of detainment bunds to decrease surface runoff leaving pastoral catchments: Investigating a novel approach to agricultural stormwater management

Journal

AGRICULTURAL WATER MANAGEMENT
Volume 243, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

ELSEVIER
DOI: 10.1016/j.agwat.2020.106423

Keywords

stormflow; diffuse pollution; soil infiltration; nutrient loss mitigation; pastoral agriculture; water quality

Funding

  1. Ministry of Primary Industries Sustainable Farming Fund
  2. National Institute of Water and Atmospheric Research's Strategic Science Investment Fund
  3. Dairy NZ
  4. Bay of Plenty
  5. Environment Canterbury
  6. Waikato Regional Council
  7. Horizons Regional Council
  8. Ballance AgriNutrients Ltd
  9. Beef and Lamb NZ
  10. Deer Industry NZ

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Detainment bunds (DBs) are an effective strategy to reduce the loss of nutrients and sediment in surface runoff from grazed pastures, decreasing contaminant loads delivered to water bodies and contributing to water quality improvement. Results of a study in New Zealand's Lake Rotorua catchment showed that DBs effectively decreased annual discharge volumes by up to 43%.
Storm generated surface runoff is responsible for significant portions of the contaminants exported from grazed pastures that contribute to water quality impairment in inland and coastal waters. Detainment bunds (DBs) were investigated as a novel strategy to mitigate the losses of nutrients and sediment in surface runoff from pastures in the Lake Rotorua catchment, in New Zealand. A DB is a similar to 1.5-2 m high earthen stormwater retention structure constructed on productive pastures in the flow path of targeted ephemeral streams. The current DB design protocol recommends a minimum pond volume of 120 m(3) per hectare of contributing catchment. Bunds are capable of temporarily ponding up to 10,000 m(3) of surface runoff, which can be rapidly drained by opening an outlet valve. This 12-month study of 2 DB sites with 55 ha and 20 ha subcatchments in the Lake Rotorua catchment, found that DBs effectively decreased annual discharge volumes by 31% and 43%. Decreased runoff discharges were the result of increased soil infiltration facilitated by increased stormwater residence times on well-drained soils in the ponding area. Furthermore, discharges from the DBs occurring after runoff generation in the catchment had ceased were likely to infiltrate the soils downstream of the DBs. Combining the in-pond and downstream infiltration, the DBs prevented 43% and 63% of the annual runoff generated in the targeted catchments from reaching downstream surface waters. The results of this study demonstrate that DBs constructed on sufficiently permeable soils reduce surface runoff volumes from pastures, and are thereby capable of decreasing contaminant loads delivered to receiving surface waters. As such, DBs are likely to be an effective strategy to add to the nutrient mitigation toolbox in the Lake Rotorua catchment, and in other pastoral locations where contaminants mobilised by surface runoff contribute to water quality degradation.

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