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- Title
Supply and Transport Limitations on Phosphorus Losses from Agricultural Fields in the Lower Great Lakes Region, Canada.
- Authors
Plach, Janina M.; Macrae, Merrin L.; Ali, Genevieve A.; Brunke, Richard R.; English, Michael C.; Ferguson, Gabrielle; Lam, W. Vito; Lozier, Tatianna M.; McKague, Kevin; O'Halloran, Ivan P.; Opolko, Gilian; Van Esbroeck, Christopher J.
- Abstract
Phosphorus (P) mobilization in agricultural landscapes is regulated by both hydrologic (transport) and biogeochemical (supply) processes interacting within soils; however, the dominance of these controls can vary spatially and temporally. In this study, we analyzed a 5-yr dataset of stormflow events across nine agricultural fields in the lower Great Lakes region of Ontario, Canada, to determine if edge-of-field surface runoff and tile drainage losses (total and dissolved reactive P) were limited by transport mechanisms or P supply. Field sites ranged from clay loam, silt loam, to sandy loam textures. Findings indicate that biogeochemical processes (P supply) were more important for tile drain P loading patterns (i.e., variable flow-weighted mean concentrations ([Cf]) across a range of flow regimes) relative to surface runoff, which trended toward a more chemostatic or transport-limited response. At two sites with the same soil texture, higher tile [Cf] and greater transport limitations were apparent at the site with higher soil available P (STP); however, STP did not significantly correlate with tile [Cf] or P loading patterns across the nine sites. This may reflect that the fields were all within a narrow STP range and were not elevated in STP concentrations (Olsen-P, ≤25 mg kg-1). For the study sites where STP was maintained at reasonable concentrations, hydrology was less of a driving factor for tile P loadings, and thus management strategies that limit P supply may be an effective way to reduce P losses from fields (e.g., timing of fertilizer application).
- Subjects
CANADA; AGRICULTURE; PHOSPHORUS &; the environment; ATMOSPHERIC transport
- Publication
Journal of Environmental Quality, 2018, Vol 47, Issue 1, p96
- ISSN
0047-2425
- Publication type
Article
- DOI
10.2134/jeq2017.06.0234