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Unusual seasonal patterns and inferred processes of nitrogen retention in forested headwaters of the Upper Susquehanna River

Journal

BIOGEOCHEMISTRY
Volume 93, Issue 3, Pages 197-218

Publisher

SPRINGER
DOI: 10.1007/s10533-009-9298-8

Keywords

N-15; O-18; Geologic nitrogen; In-stream uptake; Nitrogen retention; Nitrate seasonality

Funding

  1. NYS/WRI [01HQGR0095]
  2. Cornell University AEP/USDA CSREES [2005-34244-15740]

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Atmospheric deposition contributes a large fraction of the annual nitrogen (N) input to the basin of the Susquehanna River, a river that provides two-thirds of the annual N load to the Chesapeake Bay. Yet, there are few measurements of the retention of atmospheric N in the Upper Susquehanna's forested headwaters. We characterized the amount, form (nitrate, ammonium, and dissolved organic nitrogen), isotopic composition (delta N-15- and delta O-18-nitrate), and seasonality of stream N over 2 years for 7-13 catchments. We expected high rates of N retention and seasonal nitrate patterns typical of other seasonally snow-covered catchments: dormant season maxima and growing season minima. Coarse estimates of N export indicated high rates of inorganic N retention (> 95%), yet streams had unexpected seasonal nitrate patterns, with summer peaks (14-96 mu mol L-1), October crashes (< 1 mu mol L-1), and modest rebounds during the dormant season (< 1-20 mu mol L-1). Stream delta O-18-nitrate values indicated microbial nitrification as the primary source of stream nitrate, although snowmelt or other atmospheric source contributed up to 47% of stream nitrate in some March samples. The autumn nitrate crash coincided with leaffall, likely due to in-stream heterotrophic uptake of N. Hypothesized sources of the summer nitrate peaks include: delayed release of nitrate previously flushed to groundwater, weathering of geologic N, and summer increases in net nitrate production. Measurements of shale delta N-15 and soil-, well-, and streamwater nitrate within one catchment point toward a summer increase in soil net nitrification as the driver of this pattern. Rather than seasonal plant demand, processes governing the seasonal production, retention, and transport of nitrate in soils may drive nitrate seasonality in this and many other systems.

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