Watershed Ecology and the Environment (Jan 2022)

Sources of terrestrial nitrogen and phosphorus mobilization in South and South East Asian coastal ecosystems

  • Anup Maharjan,
  • Peter M. Groffman,
  • Charles J. Vörösmarty,
  • Maria Tzortziou,
  • Xiaojing Tang,
  • Pamela A. Green

Journal volume & issue
Vol. 4
pp. 12 – 31

Abstract

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South and Southeast Asia (SSEA) is a socially, economically and ecologically diverse region, with a rapidly growing population and accelerating industrial development, agricultural intensification using manufactured fertilizers, terrestrial landscape change, expansion of water engineering, sewage production and land conversions. Nitrogen and phosphorus are major nutrients that play an essential role in the eutrophication of inland and coastal water bodies. Eutrophic areas, when combined with appropriate coastal ocean physical conditions, can develop into hypoxic zones that result in long-term ecosystem disruption. This study addressed changes in terrestrial nitrogen and phosphorus mobilization associated with land-use transitions, fertilizer use and sewage from 2002 to 2016 in the SSEA region, with a focus on the Mekong and Krishna-Godavari watersheds. Terrestrial mobilization results from the internal production or addition of reactive, soluble and/or plant available forms of nitrogen and phosphorus. To estimate terrestrial mobilization associated with land conversion, published data were mined for estimates of land cover change effects on soil carbon, nitrogen and phosphorus pools. Data on exogenous fertilizer and sewage effluents were also compiled from the literature. From the analysis, it showed that fertilizer input was the largest source of nitrogen and phosphorus in both case study watersheds. Sewage and land conversion were not a significant source of terrestrial phosphorus mobilization in either watershed. All land conversions resulted in declines in soil carbon, ranging from 11% to 38%. Nitrogen increased, on average by 15%, in conversions of agricultural to urban land, but decreased in all other conversions. Phosphorus increased by 89% in wetland to agriculture conversions, but decreased between 2% and 24% for other land conversions. Expansion of agriculture at the expense of forest was the dominant land conversion in the Mekong watershed. Urbanization, at the expense of agriculture and forest, was the dominant land conversion in the Krishna/Godavari watershed. These results suggest that management of nutrient pollution (N and P) in SSEA will need to focus on reducing the use and/or improving the efficiency of fertilizer use along with regular consolidated monitoring in both watersheds.

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