Dredging effects on selected nutrient concentrations and ecoenzymatic activity in two drainage ditch sediments in the lower Mississippi River Valley
Agricultural drainage ditches are conduits between production acreage and receiving aquatic systems. Often overlooked for their mitigation capabilities, agricultural drainage ditches provide an important role for nutrient transformation via microbial metabolism. Variations in ecoenzyme activities ha...
Main Authors: | , , , , |
---|---|
Format: | Article |
Language: | English |
Published: |
KeAi Communications Co., Ltd.
2017-09-01
|
Series: | International Soil and Water Conservation Research |
Subjects: | |
Online Access: | http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S2095633917300357 |
id |
doaj-2616d74774c3463e899577f60678b35c |
---|---|
record_format |
Article |
spelling |
doaj-2616d74774c3463e899577f60678b35c2021-02-02T07:09:03ZengKeAi Communications Co., Ltd.International Soil and Water Conservation Research2095-63392017-09-015319019510.1016/j.iswcr.2017.06.004Dredging effects on selected nutrient concentrations and ecoenzymatic activity in two drainage ditch sediments in the lower Mississippi River ValleyMatt MooreMartin A. LockeMichael JenkinsRobert W. SteinriedeDaniel S. McChesneyAgricultural drainage ditches are conduits between production acreage and receiving aquatic systems. Often overlooked for their mitigation capabilities, agricultural drainage ditches provide an important role for nutrient transformation via microbial metabolism. Variations in ecoenzyme activities have been used to elucidate microbial metabolism and resource demand of microbial communities to better understand the relationship between altered nutrient ratios and microbial activity in aquatic ecosystems. Two agricultural drainage ditches, one in the northeast portion of the Arkansas Delta and the other in the lower Mississippi Delta, were monitored for a year. Sediment samples were collected prior to each ditch being dredged (cleaned), and subsequent post-dredging samples occurred as soon as access was available. Seasonal samples were then collected throughout a year to examine effects of dredging on selected nutrient concentrations and ecoenzymatic activity recovery in drainage ditch sediments. Phosphorus concentrations in sediments after dredging decreased 33–66%, depending on ditch and phosphorus extraction methodology. Additionally, ecoenzymatic activity was significantly decreased in most sediment samples after dredging. Fluorescein diacetate hydrolysis activity, an estimate of total microbial activity, decreased 56–67% after dredging in one of the two ditches. Many sample sites also had significant phosphorus and ecoenzymatic activity differences between the post-dredge samples and the year-long follow-up samples. Results indicate microbial metabolism in dredged drainage ditches may take up to a year or more to recover to pre-dredged levels. Likewise, while sediment nutrient concentrations may be decreased through dredging and removal, runoff and erosion events over time tend to quickly replenish nutrient concentrations in replaced sediments. Understanding nutrient dynamics and microbial metabolism within agricultural drainage ditches is a crucial step toward addressing issues of nutrient enrichment in aquatic receiving systems, especially those contributing to the Gulf of Mexico.http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S2095633917300357PhosphorusFDADenitrificationMehlich IIIMicrobial Metabolism |
collection |
DOAJ |
language |
English |
format |
Article |
sources |
DOAJ |
author |
Matt Moore Martin A. Locke Michael Jenkins Robert W. Steinriede Daniel S. McChesney |
spellingShingle |
Matt Moore Martin A. Locke Michael Jenkins Robert W. Steinriede Daniel S. McChesney Dredging effects on selected nutrient concentrations and ecoenzymatic activity in two drainage ditch sediments in the lower Mississippi River Valley International Soil and Water Conservation Research Phosphorus FDA Denitrification Mehlich III Microbial Metabolism |
author_facet |
Matt Moore Martin A. Locke Michael Jenkins Robert W. Steinriede Daniel S. McChesney |
author_sort |
Matt Moore |
title |
Dredging effects on selected nutrient concentrations and ecoenzymatic activity in two drainage ditch sediments in the lower Mississippi River Valley |
title_short |
Dredging effects on selected nutrient concentrations and ecoenzymatic activity in two drainage ditch sediments in the lower Mississippi River Valley |
title_full |
Dredging effects on selected nutrient concentrations and ecoenzymatic activity in two drainage ditch sediments in the lower Mississippi River Valley |
title_fullStr |
Dredging effects on selected nutrient concentrations and ecoenzymatic activity in two drainage ditch sediments in the lower Mississippi River Valley |
title_full_unstemmed |
Dredging effects on selected nutrient concentrations and ecoenzymatic activity in two drainage ditch sediments in the lower Mississippi River Valley |
title_sort |
dredging effects on selected nutrient concentrations and ecoenzymatic activity in two drainage ditch sediments in the lower mississippi river valley |
publisher |
KeAi Communications Co., Ltd. |
series |
International Soil and Water Conservation Research |
issn |
2095-6339 |
publishDate |
2017-09-01 |
description |
Agricultural drainage ditches are conduits between production acreage and receiving aquatic systems. Often overlooked for their mitigation capabilities, agricultural drainage ditches provide an important role for nutrient transformation via microbial metabolism. Variations in ecoenzyme activities have been used to elucidate microbial metabolism and resource demand of microbial communities to better understand the relationship between altered nutrient ratios and microbial activity in aquatic ecosystems. Two agricultural drainage ditches, one in the northeast portion of the Arkansas Delta and the other in the lower Mississippi Delta, were monitored for a year. Sediment samples were collected prior to each ditch being dredged (cleaned), and subsequent post-dredging samples occurred as soon as access was available. Seasonal samples were then collected throughout a year to examine effects of dredging on selected nutrient concentrations and ecoenzymatic activity recovery in drainage ditch sediments. Phosphorus concentrations in sediments after dredging decreased 33–66%, depending on ditch and phosphorus extraction methodology. Additionally, ecoenzymatic activity was significantly decreased in most sediment samples after dredging. Fluorescein diacetate hydrolysis activity, an estimate of total microbial activity, decreased 56–67% after dredging in one of the two ditches. Many sample sites also had significant phosphorus and ecoenzymatic activity differences between the post-dredge samples and the year-long follow-up samples. Results indicate microbial metabolism in dredged drainage ditches may take up to a year or more to recover to pre-dredged levels. Likewise, while sediment nutrient concentrations may be decreased through dredging and removal, runoff and erosion events over time tend to quickly replenish nutrient concentrations in replaced sediments. Understanding nutrient dynamics and microbial metabolism within agricultural drainage ditches is a crucial step toward addressing issues of nutrient enrichment in aquatic receiving systems, especially those contributing to the Gulf of Mexico. |
topic |
Phosphorus FDA Denitrification Mehlich III Microbial Metabolism |
url |
http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S2095633917300357 |
work_keys_str_mv |
AT mattmoore dredgingeffectsonselectednutrientconcentrationsandecoenzymaticactivityintwodrainageditchsedimentsinthelowermississippirivervalley AT martinalocke dredgingeffectsonselectednutrientconcentrationsandecoenzymaticactivityintwodrainageditchsedimentsinthelowermississippirivervalley AT michaeljenkins dredgingeffectsonselectednutrientconcentrationsandecoenzymaticactivityintwodrainageditchsedimentsinthelowermississippirivervalley AT robertwsteinriede dredgingeffectsonselectednutrientconcentrationsandecoenzymaticactivityintwodrainageditchsedimentsinthelowermississippirivervalley AT danielsmcchesney dredgingeffectsonselectednutrientconcentrationsandecoenzymaticactivityintwodrainageditchsedimentsinthelowermississippirivervalley |
_version_ |
1724299864108433408 |