Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
2415768 Agriculture, Ecosystems & Environment 2008 12 Pages PDF
Abstract
Tile drainage shortens the residence time of water in the soil and may therefore aggravate the diffuse pollution of adjacent surface water bodies. To assess the environmental impacts of tile drainage on surface water bodies, it is important to assess how the drainage discharge and its solute signal translate from the frequently studied plot scale to the catchment scale. We used results from the automated hydrograph separation method 'recursive digital filter' in combination with a two-component mixing model to quantify the role of the different flow components and flow paths for the nitrate-nitrogen losses at three different scales - collector drain outlet (4.2 ha), ditch (179 ha) and brook catchment (15.5 km2) - in a pleistocene lowland area in North-Eastern Germany. Measured and modelled NO3-N concentrations of three 6-months winter seasons agreed reasonably well. At the tile drainage plot, the fast flow component was responsible for 63-91% of the total simulated nitrate-nitrogen losses. The stated ranges were derived from all accepted model runs. This flow component was interpreted as a fast component bearing nitrate from the nutrient-enriched topsoil. Tile drainage itself delivered 89-95% of the total nitrate losses in the ditch catchment. In the brook catchment, at most 25% of the area was responsible for 54-85% of the NO3-N losses. Although the mixing model is limited by the assumption of constant component concentrations and conservative behaviour of the solutes, it has shown to be a useful tool for hydrochemical studies. Overall, the results emphasise the importance of tile drainage for the catchments' hydrochemistry and its environmental impact on the larger scale. Consequently, it will be difficult to significantly reduce diffuse pollution in an artificially drained lowland landscape on the catchment scale without addressing the issue of tile drainage. As a next step for model validation, other solutes such as sulphate and chloride could be added to reduce the uncertainty, and grassland should be explicitly included into the mixing model.
Related Topics
Life Sciences Agricultural and Biological Sciences Agronomy and Crop Science
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