Determining the Impact of Riparian Wetlands on Nutrient Cycling, Storage and Export in Permeable Agricultural Catchments
Abstract
:1. Introduction
- Wetlands in these permeable catchments act as a sink for N and P under baseflow conditions, with high concentrations of dissolved organic N (DON) and P (DOP) accumulated in soil porewaters following plant assimilation of nitrate (NO3-N) and orthophosphate (PO4-P), plant dieback and microbial decomposition of dead organic matter.
- The wetland acts as a nutrient source under high flow conditions, with nutrient-rich porewater exported to the adjacent River Lambourn, predominantly in the form of DON and DOP.
- Wet-warm periods, with associated changes in soil redox status provide the optimum conditions for gaseous N flux from the wetland via denitrification, and for the desorption of P from the soil matrix and its subsequent flux in aqueous form to the adjacent River Lambourn.
- The wetland source/sink function varies both from baseflow to high flow conditions, and also from wet year to dry year, with greater rates of nutrient export to the adjacent Lambourn in wetter years, and greater retention of both N and P in the soil porewaters in drier years.
- the sub-surface structure, hydrological connectivity and function of the wetland using geophysical mapping and geochemical ratio techniques to identify the likely origins and residence times of waters within the wetland soil matrix as these varied in space and time. In combination these would allow identification of the potential location of biogeochemical cycling hotspots within the wetland.
- the nutrient cycling, retention and export behaviour in the wetland using a high temporal and spatial resolution sampling and analysis programme for all N species and P fractions flushed to and through the wetland and out to the adjacent aquifer and river, including the use of isotope ratios to discover direct evidence of the rates and locations of denitrification hotspots in the wetland. From this, we could then determine:
- the biogeochemical cycling hotspots within the wetland;
- the extent to which inorganic N and P ‘loss’ could be accounted for via denitrification, biotic uptake, and degradation of dead organic matter leading to the accumulation and subsequent flushing of dissolved organic nutrient fractions within soil porewaters; and
- the whole system nutrient attenuation behaviour and capacity of natural riparian wetlands in intensively farmed permeable catchments.
- Whether an alternative, lighter touch approach could effectively identify the wetland biogeochemical functional zones and likely wetland nutrient ‘removal’ efficiency by using geochemical, geophysical and natural abundance isotopic techniques, testing the outcomes from this approach against the fine-resolution but more time-consuming identification of these zones achieved in step 2.
2. Materials and Methods
2.1. Site Description: The Boxford Wetland
2.2. Characterisation of Wetland Functional Zones Using Vegetation Mapping
2.3. Characterisation of Subsurface Stratigraphy Using Geophysical Techniques
2.4. Characterisation of the Biogeochemical Functional Zones Using Nutrient Speciation Chemistry, Major Ion Geochemistry and Isotope Geochemistry Analysis Approaches
2.4.1. Site Instrumentation
2.4.2. Samples Analysis to Determine N Species and P Fraction Concentrations in Porewaters
2.4.3. Sample Analysis to Determine Major Element Geochemistry
2.4.4. Sample Analysis to Determine Isotope Ratios in Soil Water, Alluvial Gravels and Wetland Vegetation
3. Results
3.1. Characterising Wetland Hydrological Function through Hydrological Monitoring and Geochemical Indices
- Groundwater nutrient chemistry is predominantly in the form of nitrate, with a mean concentration of 9 mg/L nitrate (NO3-N) and 1.5 mg/L DON in the Boxford borehole over the period 16 September 2003 to 16 January 2005. Similar chemistry is evident in the proto-stream, the River Lambourn and the piezometers at 2–3.5 m below the wetland. The data suggest that all of these sites share a similar source, and it is likely that they are all recently derived from groundwater sources.
- Mean DON concentrations in the River Lambourn, the piezometers and the proto-stream all show some enrichment over the 1.5 mg/L DON recorded at the Boxford borehole adjacent to the wetland, and this is likely to reflect mixing of groundwater with enriched soil porewaters draining from the wetland under baseflow conditions, and/or biogeochemical cycling within the River Lambourn [5,36,37,38].
- Samplers within the wetland soil matrix which are very close to the proto-stream channel also share this chemistry, notably those at C1 (20 cm), and at all three depths at D5. Sampler nest D5 is very close (<5 m) to the Boxford borehole, and lies outside the wetland proper, in the line of blackthorn scrub at the margins of the site. It may be that this indicates shared source water with that sampled from the borehole.
- Samplers further from the proto-stream channel, with a longer hydraulic residence time, show depletion of inorganic N under baseflow conditions, and this is likely to reflect both plant uptake and gaseous N loss through denitrification.
- These samples also show enrichment with DON concentrations up to a maximum of 4 mg/L.
- Samples collected at 60 cm depth along transect A show a chemistry similar to that of the adjacent River Lambourn, with a notable increase in nitrate concentrations from 20 to 60 cm depth at all stations along this transect. This may reflect riverine incursion from the Lambourn.
3.2. Identifying Biogeochemical Cycling Hotspots Using Isotope Geochemical Analysis
3.3. Developing a Conceptual Model of Wetland Biogeochemical Function under Baseflow versus Stormflow Conditions
4. Discussion
5. Conclusions
- Attenuation of pollutant delivery from land to stream appears to occur both within the hyporheic zone and the adjacent riparian wetland ecosystem.
- The primary pathway for modification of the nutrient speciation of inflowing waters is through plant uptake of inorganic nutrient species and microbiological breakdown of DOM to release DON and DOP compounds to soil porewaters.
- The reciprocity in inorganic and organic nutrient fraction concentrations across the wetland suggests no net storage of nutrients within the soil porewaters, nor substantial net export of nitrogen to atmospheric sources through denitrification.
- The primary mechanism for the export of nutrients accumulated in soil porewaters appears to be flushing of the macropores and micropores during storm events, with nutrient-rich waters exported primarily via the proto-stream channel, but also through lateral flow to the Lambourn and vertical exchange with groundwater through the alluvial gravels.
- The findings from the geochemical analyses of soil porewaters and source waters suggest that the wetland is groundwater fed, with flows likely to be delivered from the major dry valley feature which appears, topographically, to be aligned upslope with the line of the wetland proto-stream channel.
- The extent to which nutrient chemistry of inflowing waters is modified by wetland biogeochemical cycling depends on the residence time for the water within the wetland
- Well-drained areas of the wetland with a short hydraulic residence time exhibit soil porewater nutrient chemistry and major and trace element geochemistry comparable to chalk groundwater, suggesting little transformation of the nutrient load moving along these flow pathways.
- Surface and subsurface features identified through the site topographic and geophysical surveys, supplemented by soil coring, such as the existence and extent of the proto-stream channel, the depth of the alluvial gravels, and the presence of putty chalk lenses, are also critical in defining the hydrological function of wetland systems and the likely role any wetland may play in the transport and transformation of nutrient loads exported from land to stream.
- Geophysical methods, in association with limited site characterisation through geochemical, isotope and nutrient hydrochemical techniques may be useful in future studies to indicate the likely role played by wetlands in the nutrient hydrochemical function of permeable catchments, allowing them to be built into catchment scale models of biogeochemical function.
- This combination of techniques, building on recent advances in geophysical, geochemical and isotope characterisation provides a novel approach for improved understanding of biogeochemical function in permeable wetlands. Perhaps more importantly, no single technique on its own would have given an unambiguous representation of the hydrological and biogeochemical function of the wetland, and a toolkit comprising a range of complementary methods will provide a more complete and robust indication of wetland function at a process scale.
Author Contributions
Funding
Acknowledgments
Conflicts of Interest
References
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Sampling Programme | Dates |
---|---|
Weekly Water Sampling: | |
Water level at dipwells | 16 September 2003–16 January 2005 |
Soil porewaters in wetland alluvial soils, 23 nests, 20, 40, 60 cm | 16 September 2003–16 January 2005 |
Water levels in wetland alluvial soils, 23 dipwells, | 7 January 2004–16 January 2005 |
Proto-stream surface water, 3 sites, | 7 January 2004–16 July 2004 |
Boxford borehole, 30 m depth | 1 December 2004–16 January 2005 |
Piezometers in gravels, 5 sites, 2 m, 3 m depth | 1 July 2004–16 January 2005 |
Puncture tensiometers in wetland alluvial soils | 1 September 2004–16 January 2005 |
Plant Sampling: | |
Plant species list | April 2004, June 2004 |
Biomass sampling, single and mixed species stands, monthly | Monthly |
Structural measurements, including canopy height, stem density per unit area, average stem diameter recorded monthly | Monthly |
Plant health monitored monthly using fluorimeter | Monthly |
Wetland Soil Porewater and Source Water Geochemistry: | |
Soil porewaters, piezometers, river and groundwater sampled twice and analysed to determine geochemical signature. | July 2004, December 2004 |
Isotopic Signatures of Wetland Biogeochemical Function: | |
15N/14N and 18O/16O determined on water samples collected from porous cup samplers along transects, piezometers, borehole, river | October 2004 |
15N/14N determined on vegetation samples collected along transects | October 2004 |
Sites Sampled | δ15N (‰ vs. AIR) | δ18O (‰ vs. SMOW) | NO3-N mg/L |
---|---|---|---|
Boreholes | |||
Westbrook array | |||
PL26 D-1, SO4-01126 | +3.9 | +2 | 5.84 |
PL26 D-2, SO4-01127 | +4.0 | +6 | 6.29 |
PL26 N-4, SO4-01131 | +4.3 | +1 | 6.87 |
PL26 H-2, SO4-01134 | +3.9 | +5 | 6.09 |
PL26 E-2, SO4-01138 | +4.1 | +3 | 6.05 |
Boxford borehole (sampled 02-October-2004) | +4.0 | +3 | |
Boxford wetland (sampled 27-October-2004) | |||
B2 ‘short’ piezometer | +4.5 | +2 | 5.76 |
C1 piezometer | +4 | 4.70 | |
C1 proto-stream lower | +5.0 | +3 | 5.58 |
C5 piezometer | +4.6 | +3 | 6.67 |
D1 proto-stream main | +4.8 | +1 | 5.60 |
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Johnes, P.J.; Gooddy, D.C.; Heaton, T.H.E.; Binley, A.; Kennedy, M.P.; Shand, P.; Prior, H. Determining the Impact of Riparian Wetlands on Nutrient Cycling, Storage and Export in Permeable Agricultural Catchments. Water 2020, 12, 167. https://doi.org/10.3390/w12010167
Johnes PJ, Gooddy DC, Heaton THE, Binley A, Kennedy MP, Shand P, Prior H. Determining the Impact of Riparian Wetlands on Nutrient Cycling, Storage and Export in Permeable Agricultural Catchments. Water. 2020; 12(1):167. https://doi.org/10.3390/w12010167
Chicago/Turabian StyleJohnes, Penny J., Daren C. Gooddy, Timothy H. E. Heaton, Andrew Binley, Michael P. Kennedy, Paul Shand, and Hannah Prior. 2020. "Determining the Impact of Riparian Wetlands on Nutrient Cycling, Storage and Export in Permeable Agricultural Catchments" Water 12, no. 1: 167. https://doi.org/10.3390/w12010167
APA StyleJohnes, P. J., Gooddy, D. C., Heaton, T. H. E., Binley, A., Kennedy, M. P., Shand, P., & Prior, H. (2020). Determining the Impact of Riparian Wetlands on Nutrient Cycling, Storage and Export in Permeable Agricultural Catchments. Water, 12(1), 167. https://doi.org/10.3390/w12010167