4.6 Article

A Field Experiment for Tracing Lateral Subsurface Flow in a Post-Glacial Hummocky Arable Soil Landscape

Journal

WATER
Volume 15, Issue 6, Pages -

Publisher

MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/w15061248

Keywords

potassium bromide tracer; natural rainfall; suction cup sampling

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The phenomenon of lateral subsurface flow (LSF) was studied in different soil types by applying potassium bromide and observing the soil solution and soil samples. Heterogeneous subsurface structures were found to have an impact on the transport time of pesticides and nutrients from agricultural areas.
Lateral subsurface flow (LSF) is a phenomenon that is widely occurring including the hummocky ground moraine landscape. Due to the heterogeneous structure of the subsurface, transport times of pesticides and nutrients from agricultural areas to adjacent water bodies are difficult to assess. Here, LSF at Luvisol and Regosol plots of an experimental field were studied by applying potassium bromide along a 10 m trench below the plow pan in October 2019. The soil solution was collected in suction cups 3 m downslope of the trench and in April 2021, the soil was sampled down to 1 m depth. Almost no bromide was found in the soil solution except for the 160 cm depth of the Regosol plot after a 541 day period. After the same time, bromide was observed in the 90 cm soil depth directly underneath the application trench of the Luvisol plot. A 3D reconstruction of the subsurface horizon boundaries of the Regosol revealed subsurface heterogeneities such as sand lenses that might have been attributed to the heterogeneous subsurface flow pattern.

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