Influence of agricultural managed aquifer recharge on nitrate transport: The role of soil texture and flooding frequency

Abstract Agricultural managed aquifer recharge (Ag‐MAR) is a concept in which farmland is flooded during the winter using excess surface water to recharge the underlying groundwater. In this study, we show how different recharge practices affect NO3− leaching and mineralization–denitrification proce...

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Main Authors: Nicholas P. Murphy, Hannah Waterhouse, Helen E. Dahlke
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Wiley 2021-09-01
Series:Vadose Zone Journal
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.1002/vzj2.20150
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spelling doaj-cf337f6e1fe64dc09bee13317f7678c32021-09-25T12:34:18ZengWileyVadose Zone Journal1539-16632021-09-01205n/an/a10.1002/vzj2.20150Influence of agricultural managed aquifer recharge on nitrate transport: The role of soil texture and flooding frequencyNicholas P. Murphy0Hannah Waterhouse1Helen E. Dahlke2Dep. of Land, Air and Water Resources Univ. of California Davis CA 95616 USADep. of Land, Air and Water Resources Univ. of California Davis CA 95616 USADep. of Land, Air and Water Resources Univ. of California Davis CA 95616 USAAbstract Agricultural managed aquifer recharge (Ag‐MAR) is a concept in which farmland is flooded during the winter using excess surface water to recharge the underlying groundwater. In this study, we show how different recharge practices affect NO3− leaching and mineralization–denitrification processes in different soil systems. Two contrasting soil textures (sand and fine sandy loam) from the Central Valley, California, were repeatedly flooded with 15 cm of water at varying time intervals in field and soil column experiments. Nitrogen species (NO3–, NH4+, total N), total C, dissolved O2, and moisture content were measured throughout the experiments. Results show that when flooding occurs at longer intervals (every 1–2 wk), N mineralization increases, leading to an increase of mobile NO3− in the upper root zone and leaching of significant quantities of NO3− from both soil textures (137.3 ± 6.6% [sand] and 145.7 ± 5.8% [fine sandy loam] of initial residual soil NO3−) during subsequent flooding events. Laboratory mineralization incubations show that long flooding intervals promote mineralization and production of excess NO3− at rates of 0.11–3.93 mg N kg–1 wk–1 (sand) and 0.08–3.41 mg N kg–1 wk–1 (fine sandy loam). Decreasing the flooding frequency to 72 h reduces potential mineralization, decreasing the amount of NO3− leached during flooding events (31.7 ± 3.8% [sand] and 64.7 ± 10.4% [fine sandy loam] of initial residual soil NO3–). The results indicate that implementing recharge as repeated events over a long (multiple‐week) time horizon might increase the total amount of NO3− potentially available for leaching to groundwater.https://doi.org/10.1002/vzj2.20150
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Nicholas P. Murphy
Hannah Waterhouse
Helen E. Dahlke
spellingShingle Nicholas P. Murphy
Hannah Waterhouse
Helen E. Dahlke
Influence of agricultural managed aquifer recharge on nitrate transport: The role of soil texture and flooding frequency
Vadose Zone Journal
author_facet Nicholas P. Murphy
Hannah Waterhouse
Helen E. Dahlke
author_sort Nicholas P. Murphy
title Influence of agricultural managed aquifer recharge on nitrate transport: The role of soil texture and flooding frequency
title_short Influence of agricultural managed aquifer recharge on nitrate transport: The role of soil texture and flooding frequency
title_full Influence of agricultural managed aquifer recharge on nitrate transport: The role of soil texture and flooding frequency
title_fullStr Influence of agricultural managed aquifer recharge on nitrate transport: The role of soil texture and flooding frequency
title_full_unstemmed Influence of agricultural managed aquifer recharge on nitrate transport: The role of soil texture and flooding frequency
title_sort influence of agricultural managed aquifer recharge on nitrate transport: the role of soil texture and flooding frequency
publisher Wiley
series Vadose Zone Journal
issn 1539-1663
publishDate 2021-09-01
description Abstract Agricultural managed aquifer recharge (Ag‐MAR) is a concept in which farmland is flooded during the winter using excess surface water to recharge the underlying groundwater. In this study, we show how different recharge practices affect NO3− leaching and mineralization–denitrification processes in different soil systems. Two contrasting soil textures (sand and fine sandy loam) from the Central Valley, California, were repeatedly flooded with 15 cm of water at varying time intervals in field and soil column experiments. Nitrogen species (NO3–, NH4+, total N), total C, dissolved O2, and moisture content were measured throughout the experiments. Results show that when flooding occurs at longer intervals (every 1–2 wk), N mineralization increases, leading to an increase of mobile NO3− in the upper root zone and leaching of significant quantities of NO3− from both soil textures (137.3 ± 6.6% [sand] and 145.7 ± 5.8% [fine sandy loam] of initial residual soil NO3−) during subsequent flooding events. Laboratory mineralization incubations show that long flooding intervals promote mineralization and production of excess NO3− at rates of 0.11–3.93 mg N kg–1 wk–1 (sand) and 0.08–3.41 mg N kg–1 wk–1 (fine sandy loam). Decreasing the flooding frequency to 72 h reduces potential mineralization, decreasing the amount of NO3− leached during flooding events (31.7 ± 3.8% [sand] and 64.7 ± 10.4% [fine sandy loam] of initial residual soil NO3–). The results indicate that implementing recharge as repeated events over a long (multiple‐week) time horizon might increase the total amount of NO3− potentially available for leaching to groundwater.
url https://doi.org/10.1002/vzj2.20150
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