4.7 Article

Controls for multi-temporal patterns of riverine nitrogen and phosphorus export to lake: Implications for catchment management by high-frequency observations

Journal

JOURNAL OF ENVIRONMENTAL MANAGEMENT
Volume 320, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

ACADEMIC PRESS LTD- ELSEVIER SCIENCE LTD
DOI: 10.1016/j.jenvman.2022.115858

Keywords

Nutrient; Nonpoint source pollution; Lake chaohu; Best management practice; Rainfall event; Hydrological Simulation Program -FORTRAN

Funding

  1. National Key Research and Devel- opment Program of China
  2. National Natural Science Foundation of China
  3. Talent Start-up Project of Nanjing Institute of Geography and Limnology, Chinese Academy of Sciences
  4. [2021YFD1700600]
  5. [42007362]
  6. [Y8SL031001]

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The study analyzed data from an automatic water quality monitoring station in a typical agricultural catchment in China to understand the patterns and controls of riverine nitrogen and phosphorus export. The results showed a significant decreasing trend in nitrogen and phosphorus concentration, with rainfall and temperature playing a role in their variations. Human activities such as fertilization and agricultural drainage also influenced nutrient loading.
Intensifying human activity coupled with climate change increase the transport of excess riverine nitrogen (N) and phosphorus (P) loading from catchment to lake, leading to eutrophication and harmful algal blooms worldwide. To improve understanding of multi-temporal patterns of riverine N and P export and their hydro-biogeochemical controls over both episodic events and long-term trend, we analyzed and interpreted high -frequency data of total nitrogen (TN), ammonia-nitrogen (NH4-N), and total phosphorus (TP) provided by an automatic water quality monitoring station in a typical agricultural catchment draining to Lake Chaohu, China. Mann-Kendall test revealed a significant decreasing trend of riverine N and P concentration most of the time during 2018-2020. At the sub-daily scale, intraday TN concentrations varied by more than 1 mg/L in 31.8% of the period. Monthly TN and TP concentrations were particularly high in December 2019, indicating combined effect of hydrologic (long dry antecedent period and subsequent intensive rainfall events) and anthropogenic controls (fertilization and agricultural drainage). Significantly higher TN concentrations in winter and TP con-centrations in summer reflected coupled dominances of precipitation and temperature on hydrologic and biogeochemical processes. Rainfall events with very heavy intensity drove disproportionate N and P loads (more than 20% of the total export) in only 3.2% of the period. Moderate and very heavy events registered the highest TN and TP concentrations, respectively. Our results highlighted the importance of automatic water quality monitoring station to reveal dynamics of riverine N and P export, which may imply future nutrient loading abatement plans for lake-connected catchment.

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