Field Testing the Riparian Ecosystem Management Model on a Riparian Buffer in the North Carolina
Upper Coastal Plain |
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Authors: | Amey S. Tilak Michael R. Burchell II Mohamed A. Youssef Richard R. Lowrance Randy G. Williams |
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Affiliation: | 1. Department of Geography, Earth, and the Environmental Sciences, University of Birmingham, , Birmingham, B15 2TT United Kingdom;2. Biological and Agricultural Engineering at D.S. Weaver Labs, North Carolina State University, , Raleigh, North Carolina, 27695;3. United States Department of Agriculture‐Agricultural Research Service (USDA‐ARS), , Tifton, Georgia, 31793 |
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Abstract: | The riparian ecosystem management model (REMM) was field tested using five years (2005‐2009) of measured hydrologic and water quality data on a riparian buffer located in the Tar‐Pamlico River Basin, North Carolina. The buffer site received NO3‐N loading from an agricultural field that was fertilized with inorganic fertilizer. Field results showed the buffer reduced groundwater NO3‐N concentration moving to the stream over a five‐year period. REMM was calibrated hydrologically using daily field‐measured water table depths (WTDs), and with monthly NO3‐N concentrations in groundwater wells. Results showed simulated WTDs and NO3‐N concentrations in good agreement with measured values. The mean absolute error and Willmott's index of agreement for WTDs varied from 13‐45 cm and 0.72‐0.92, respectively, while the root mean square error and Willmott's index of agreement for NO3‐N concentrations ranged from 1.04‐5.92 mg/l and 0.1‐0.86, respectively, over the five‐year period. REMM predicted plant nitrogen (N) uptake and denitrification were within ranges reported in other riparian buffer field studies. The calibrated and validated REMM was used to simulate 33 years of buffer performance at the site. Results showed that on average the buffer reduced NO3‐N concentrations from 12 mg/l at the field edge to 0.7 mg/l at the stream edge over the simulation period, while the total N and NO3‐N load reductions from the field edge to the stream were 77 and 82%, respectively. |
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Keywords: | water quality riparian buffers nonpoint source pollution nutrients riparian ecosystem management model |
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