4.7 Article

Runoff and leaching of dissolved phosphorus in streams from a rainfed mixed cropping and grazing catchment under a Mediterranean climate in Australia

期刊

SCIENCE OF THE TOTAL ENVIRONMENT
卷 771, 期 -, 页码 -

出版社

ELSEVIER
DOI: 10.1016/j.scitotenv.2021.145371

关键词

Critical source area (CSA); Dissolved reactive P; Erosion; Leaching; Phosphorus buffering index; Runoff; Throughflow

资金

  1. GRDC
  2. Murdoch University as part of its Nutrient Management Initiative [CS00034]
  3. Chinese Scholar Council
  4. CSIRO

向作者/读者索取更多资源

Managing phosphorus is a global priority for environmental water quality. A study in Western Australia's Fitzgerald River catchment found that dissolved phosphorus transport was dominant, with physical filtering methods like riparian vegetation proving ineffective in restricting phosphorus transport into streams. Evidence-based fertiliser advice could help reduce dissolved reactive phosphorus losses without yield loss.
Managing phosphorus (P) is a global priority for environmental water quality due to P lost from agricultural land through leaching, runoff and subsurface flow. In Western Australia (WA), following decades of P fertiliser application to crops and pastures in low rainfall regions, questions have been raised about this region's contribution to environmental P loss. This study was conducted on the Fitzgerald River catchment in the south Western Australia (WA) with mixed cropping and grazing land uses and a Mediterranean climate with low mean rainfall (similar to 350 mm yr(-1)). Phosphorus forms were monitored continuously over a three-year period in five separate streams, each draining a defined sub-catchment. The P concentrations in streams consistently exceeded Australian and New Zealand Environment Conservation Council (ANZECC) trigger values throughout the monitoring period. Of the measured total P concentration, similar to 75% was dissolved P (DRP; <0.45 mu m) and 80% of that fraction was in the filterable reactive form (FRP). These water quality measurements and other independent soil investigations at this site, suggest that transport of dissolved P rather than erosion of sediment-bound P was dominant in this environment. Based on extractable soil P (Colwell P) and the P buffering index (PBI), predicted concentrations of dissolved reactive P (DRP) in soil solution in topsoils (0-10 cm) across this catchment, generally exceeded ANZECC's values of 0.07 mg PL-1. The level of exceedance was spatially variable. Streams draining areas with the lowest predicted DRP concentrations also had the lowest measured FRP concentrations. Elsewhere stream water FRP concentrations depended on both DRP concentration and the PBI of the land being drained. Our findings suggest that deployment of practices that physically filter runoff, for example riparian vegetation, would be ineffective in restricting P transport into stream in this environment. This conclusion is consistent with previous findings of the ineffectiveness of riparian buffers on coarse textured sandy soils in higher rainfall areas of southwest WA. A reduction in DRP losses without yield loss could be achieved by following evidence-based fertiliser advice from soil testing to limit losses of legacy P. (C) 2021 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.

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