4.6 Article

Spatial and temporal dynamics of nitrogen exchange in an upwelling reach of a groundwater-fed river and potential response to perturbations changing rainfall patterns under UK climate change scenarios

Journal

HYDROLOGICAL PROCESSES
Volume 35, Issue 4, Pages -

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1002/hyp.14135

Keywords

biogeochemistry; climate change; Damkö hler; groundwater; hyporheic; nitrogen; rivers

Funding

  1. Natural Environment Research Council [NE/F006063/1]
  2. Queen Mary University of London [NE/F004753/1]
  3. NERC [NE/F006063/1] Funding Source: UKRI

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The study highlights the complex spatial and temporal dynamics of hyporheic exchange flows (HEFs) and nitrogen exchange in an upwelling reach of a groundwater-fed river. It demonstrates that nitrogen pathways and transformations are influenced by groundwater flow pathways, landscape setting, and connectivity between the river and riparian zone, leading to spatial variability in nitrate attenuation dominated by denitrification. Additionally, the study suggests that temporal variability in water pathways in the reach is sensitive to changes in river flows under climate projections, which may impact the efficiency of nitrate removal in the riverbed.
We report the complex spatial and temporal dynamics of hyporheic exchange flows (HEFs) and nitrogen exchange in an upwelling reach of a 200 m groundwater-fed river. We show how research combining hydrological measurement, geophysics and isotopes, together with nutrient speciation techniques provides insight on nitrogen pathways and transformations that could not have been captured otherwise, including a zone of vertical preferential discharge of nitrate from deeper groundwater, and a zone of rapid denitrification linking the floodplain with the riverbed. Nitrate attenuation in the reach is dominated by denitrification but is spatially highly variable. This variability is driven by groundwater flow pathways and landscape setting, which influences hyporheic flow, residence time and nitrate removal. We observed the spatial connectivity of the river to the riparian zone is important because zones of horizontal preferential discharge supply organic matter from the floodplain and create anoxic riverbed conditions with overlapping zones of nitrification potential and denitrification activity that peaked 10-20 cm below the riverbed. Our data also show that temporal variability in water pathways in the reach is driven by changes in stage of the order of tens of centimetres and by strength of water flux, which may influence the depth of delivery of dissolved organic carbon. The temporal variability is sensitive to changes to river flows under UK climate projections that anticipate a 14%-15% increase in regional median winter rainfall and a 14%-19% reduction in summer rainfall. Superimposed on seasonal projections is more intensive storm activity that will likely lead to a more dynamic and inherently complex (hydrologically and biogeochemically) hyporheic zone. We recorded direct evidence of suppression of upwelling groundwater (flow reversal) during rainfall events. Such flow reversal may fuel riverbed sediments whereby delivery of organic carbon to depth, and higher denitrification rates in HEFs might act in concert to make nitrate removal in the riverbed more efficient.

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