Impact of P inputs on source-sink P dynamics of sediment along an agricultural ditch network
Name:
Impact-of-P-inputs-on-source-s ...
Size:
2.099Mb
Format:
PDF
Description:
main article
Author
Ezzati, G.Fenton, Owen

Healy, M.G.
Christianson, L.
Feyereisen, G.W.
Thornton, S.
Chen, Q.
Fan, B.
Ding, J.
Daly, Karen
Date
2020-03
Metadata
Show full item recordStatistics
Display Item StatisticsCitation
G. Ezzati, O. Fenton, M.G. Healy, L. Christianson, G.W. Feyereisen, S. Thornton, Q. Chen, B. Fan, J. Ding, K. Daly, Impact of P inputs on source-sink P dynamics of sediment along an agricultural ditch network, Journal of Environmental Management, 2020, 257, 109988. DOI: https://doi.org/10.1016/j.jenvman.2019.109988Abstract
Phosphorus (P) loss from intensive dairy farms is a pressure on water quality in agricultural catchments. At farm scale, P sources can enter in-field drains and open ditches, resulting in transfer along ditch networks and delivery into nearby streams. Open ditches could be a potential location for P mitigation if the right location was identified, depending on P sources entering the ditch and the source-sink dynamics at the sediment-water interface. The objective of this study was to identify the right location along a ditch to mitigate P losses on an intensive dairy farm. High spatial resolution grab samples for water quality, along with sediment and bankside samples, were collected along an open ditch network to characterise the P dynamics within the ditch. Phosphorus inputs to the ditch adversely affected water quality, and a step change in P concentrations (increase in mean dissolved reactive phosphorus (DRP) from 0.054 to 0.228 mg L−1) midway along the section of the ditch sampled, signalled the influence of a point source entering the ditch. Phosphorus inputs altered sediment P sorption properties as P accumulated along the length of the ditch. Accumulation of bankside and sediment labile extractable P, Mehlich 3 P (M3P) (from 13 to 97 mg kg−1) resulted in a decrease in P binding energies (k) to < 1 L mg−1 at downstream points and raised the equilibrium P concentrations (EPC0) from 0.07 to 4.61 mg L−1 along the ditch. The increase in EPC0 was in line with increasing dissolved and total P in water, demonstrating the role of sediment downstream in this ditch as a secondary source of P to water. Implementation of intervention measures are needed to both mitigate P loss and remediate sediment to restore the sink properties. In-ditch measures need to account for a physicochemical lag time before improvements in water quality will be observed.Funder
European UnionGrant Number
675120ae974a485f413a2113503eed53cd6c53
https://doi.org/10.1016/j.jenvman.2019.109988
Scopus Count
Collections
The following license files are associated with this item:
- Creative Commons
Except where otherwise noted, this item's license is described as Attribution-ShareAlike 3.0 United States