scholarly journals Land use, geology and soil properties control nutrient concentrations in headwater streams

2021 ◽  
Vol 772 ◽  
pp. 145108
Author(s):  
Faruk Djodjic ◽  
Magdalena Bieroza ◽  
Lars Bergström
2020 ◽  
Author(s):  
Gabriele Weigelhofer ◽  
Matthias Pucher

<p>Understanding the consequences of the interplay between land use and climate change is among the most pressing challenges of the 21<sup>st</sup> century for river managers. Over the past decades, agricultural land use has altered nutrient concentrations and stoichiometric ratios in stream ecosystems, thereby affecting aquatic biogeochemical cycles and the coupling among carbon, phosphorus, and nitrogen. In addition, the frequency and duration of droughts has increased dramatically across Europe, causing perennial streams to shift to intermittency and changing the capacity of sediments for the uptake and storage of macronutrients.</p><p>Our study aims to understand the effects of drying and re-wetting on the uptake, storage, and release of phosphorus and organic carbon from the benthic and the hyporheic zone of headwater streams under the additional stressor of agricultural land use. In specific, we are interested in the potential coupling and decoupling of phosphorus and dissolved organic carbon cycling in autotrophic and heterotrophic benthic biofilms. We sampled headwater streams before, during, and after the dry period in 2018 and 2019 and performed laboratory experiments with artificial drying and re-wetting and additions of dissolved organic carbon. We measured nutrient uptake and release, microbial biomass, respiration, and the activity of extra-cellular enzymes. The first results show an increased phosphorus release from the sediments immediately after re-wetting, foolowed by a reduced uptake capacity. The uptake of DOC was correlated with phosphorus in autotrophic biofilms, but not in heterotrophic ones.</p>


Water ◽  
2021 ◽  
Vol 13 (12) ◽  
pp. 1667
Author(s):  
Kathi Jankowski ◽  
Linda Deegan ◽  
Christopher Neill ◽  
Hillary Sullivan ◽  
Paulo Ilha ◽  
...  

Intensive agriculture alters headwater streams, but our understanding of its effects is limited in tropical regions where rates of agricultural expansion and intensification are currently greatest. Riparian forest protections are an important conservation tool, but whether they provide adequate protection of stream function in these areas of rapid tropical agricultural development has not been well studied. To address these gaps, we conducted a study in the lowland Brazilian Amazon, an area undergoing rapid cropland expansion, to assess the effects of land use change on organic matter dynamics (OM), ecosystem metabolism, and nutrient concentrations and uptake (nitrate and phosphate) in 11 first order streams draining forested (n = 4) or cropland (n = 7) watersheds with intact riparian forests. We found that streams had similar terrestrial litter inputs, but OM biomass was lower in cropland streams. Gross primary productivity was low and not different between land uses, but ecosystem respiration and net ecosystem production showed greater seasonality in cropland streams. Although we found no difference in stream concentrations of dissolved nutrients, phosphate uptake exceeded nitrate uptake in all streams and was higher in cropland than forested streams. This indicates that streams will be more retentive of phosphorus than nitrogen and that if fertilizer nitrogen reaches streams, it will be exported in stream networks. Overall, we found relatively subtle differences in stream function, indicating that riparian buffers have thus far provided protection against major functional shifts seen in other systems. However, the changes we did observe were linked to watershed scale shifts in hydrology, water temperature, and light availability resulting from watershed deforestation. This has implications for the conservation of tens of thousands of stream kilometers across the expanding Amazon cropland region.


2018 ◽  
Author(s):  
Peter Whitehouse ◽  
◽  
Heather Mase ◽  
Forrest Parrott ◽  
Chris Paradise ◽  
...  

2021 ◽  
Vol 193 (4) ◽  
Author(s):  
Fatihu Kabir Sadiq ◽  
Lemuel Musa Maniyunda ◽  
Abdulraheem Okehi Anumah ◽  
Kayode Adesina Adegoke

2020 ◽  
Vol 68 (2) ◽  
pp. 121-127
Author(s):  
Mahesh Kumar ◽  
N.R. Panwar ◽  
R.N. Kumawat ◽  
P. Santra

Author(s):  
Allison Neil

Soil properties are strongly influenced by the composition of the surrounding vegetation. We investigated soil properties of three ecosystems; a coniferous forest, a deciduous forest and an agricultural grassland, to determine the impact of land use change on soil properties. Disturbances such as deforestation followed by cultivation can severely alter soil properties, including losses of soil carbon. We collected nine 40 cm cores from three ecosystem types on the Roebuck Farm, north of Perth Village, Ontario, Canada. Dominant species in each ecosystem included hemlock and white pine in the coniferous forest; sugar maple, birch and beech in the deciduous forest; grasses, legumes and herbs in the grassland. Soil pH varied little between the three ecosystems and over depth. Soils under grassland vegetation had the highest bulk density, especially near the surface. The forest sites showed higher cation exchange capacity and soil moisture than the grassland; these differences largely resulted from higher organic matter levels in the surface forest soils. Vertical distribution of organic matter varied greatly amongst the three ecosystems. In the forest, more of the organic matter was located near the surface, while in the grassland organic matter concentrations varied little with depth. The results suggest that changes in land cover and land use alters litter inputs and nutrient cycling rates, modifying soil physical and chemical properties. Our results further suggest that conversion of forest into agricultural land in this area can lead to a decline in soil carbon storage.


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