Title of article
Assessing denitrification from seasonally saturated soils in an agricultural landscape: A farm-scale mass-balance approach
Author/Authors
Todd R. Anderson، نويسنده , , Christine L. Goodale، نويسنده , , Peter M. Groffman، نويسنده , , M. Todd Walter، نويسنده ,
Issue Information
روزنامه با شماره پیاپی سال 2014
Pages
10
From page
60
To page
69
Abstract
Riparian zones have received considerable attention as potential hotspots of denitrification at the landscape- or watershed-scale. Conceptually, the conditions that promote denitrification in these zones are also found in other parts of the landscape, namely those areas that are prone to saturate. However, spatiotemporal characterization and quantification of these potential denitrification hotspots are lacking, despite their importance to land managers tasked with mitigation of nitrogen (N) pollution, particularly in human-dominated landscapes. We quantified denitrification fluxes from the shallow saturated zone of an agricultural landscape using a topographic index-denitrification model, which facilitates scaling of in situ denitrification rates across the landscape based on frequency and duration of saturated conditions. Denitrification in the shallow saturated zone (i.e., where the water table is at or within a few meters of the soil surface) resulted in a N flux that was nearly half of the total denitrification from the landscape—in about a third of the area—as determined from a well-constrained whole-farm N balance constructed from farm records and field measures. Denitrification flux rates from saturated riparian soils were among the highest in the landscape, however the contribution of riparian areas to total landscape denitrification was less than 10%.
Keywords
Nitrogen cycle , Mass balance , Denitrification , Saturated zone , Biogeochemical hotspots
Journal title
Agriculture Ecosystems and Environment
Serial Year
2014
Journal title
Agriculture Ecosystems and Environment
Record number
1289742
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