Environmental Research Letters (Jan 2020)
Hydrology is the key factor for nitrogen export from tile-drained catchments under consistent land-management
Abstract
In this study, 14 years of climate, stream flow, land management, nitrate-nitrogen (NO _3 ^– N) load and concentration data were analyzed to identify potential drivers for NO _3 ^– N losses at two tile-drained catchments under cropland use in northeastern Germany. Mean (±standard deviation) annual NO _3 ^– N concentrations were 9.7 ± 2.9 (drainage plot) and 6.8 ± 2.4 mg l ^−1 (ditch catchment), while mean annual NO _3 ^– N loads amounted to 22 ± 16 and 20 ± 16 kg ha ^−1 , respectively. Significant positive relationships between annual discharge and annual NO _3 ^– N losses underlined the importance of hydrologic conditions on NO _3 ^– N export mechanisms. No direct relationships were found between N soil surface surpluses and NO _3 ^– N losses. Any possible impact of N soil surface surpluses on NO _3 ^– N export rates was overridden by the hydro-meteorological conditions in the catchment. Positive correlations between the climatic water balance and NO _3 ^– N losses suggest that agricultural catchments with similar characteristics as ours may face—without countermeasures—increased N losses in the future as regional climate projections predict wetter winters in the coming decades. Our analysis has further shown that effects of land management strategies aiming at reducing N losses into surface waters might only become visible with a delay of years or even decades.
Keywords