Title of article
Impact of selected agricultural management options on the reduction of nitrogen loads in three representative meso scale catchments in Central Germany Original Research Article
Author/Authors
Michael Rode، نويسنده , , Enrico Thiel، نويسنده , , Uwe Franko، نويسنده , , Gerald Wenk، نويسنده , , Fred Hesser، نويسنده ,
Issue Information
دوهفته نامه با شماره پیاپی سال 2009
Pages
14
From page
3459
To page
3472
Abstract
Nitrogen inputs into surface waters from diffuse sources are still unduly high and the assessment of mitigation measures is associated with large uncertainties. The objective of this paper is to investigate selected agricultural management scenarios on nitrogen loads and to assess the impact of differing catchment characteristics in central Germany. A new modelling approach, which simulates spatially distributed N-transport and transformation processes in soil and groundwater, was applied to three meso scale catchments with strongly deviating climate, soil and topography conditions. The approach uses the integrated modelling framework JAMS to link an agro-ecosystem, a rainfall-runoff and a groundwater nitrogen transport model. Different agricultural management measures with deviating levels of acceptance were analysed in the three study catchments.N-leaching rates in all three catchments varied with soil type, the lowest leaching rates being obtained for loess soil catchment (18.5 kg nitrate N ha− 1 yr− 1) and the highest for the sandy soils catchment (41.2 kg nitrate N ha− 1 yr− 1). The simulated baseflow nitrogen concentrations varied between the catchments from 1 to 6 mg N l− 1, reflecting the nitrogen reduction capacity of the subsurfaces. The management scenarios showed that the highest N leaching reduction could be achieved by good site-adapted agricultural management options. Nitrogen retention in the subsurface did not alter the ranking of the management scenarios calculated as losses from the soil zone. The reduction effect depended strongly on site specific conditions, especially climate, soil variety and the regional formation of the crop rotations.
Keywords
Nitrogen , Surface water , Management , Catchment modelling , Agriculture
Journal title
Science of the Total Environment
Serial Year
2009
Journal title
Science of the Total Environment
Record number
985073
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