Impact of Dredging on Phosphorus Transport in Agricultural Drainage Ditches of the Atlantic Coastal Plain1 |
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Authors: | Francirose Shigaki Peter J. A. Kleinman John P. Schmidt Andrew N. Sharpley Arthur L. Allen |
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Affiliation: | 1. Professor, (Shigaki), Center for Agrarian Science and Environment, Federal University of Maranhao, Campus IV, Maranhao, Brazil;2. Soil Scientist (Kleinman, Schmidt), U.S. Department of Agriculture, Agricultural Research Service, Pasture Systems and Watershed Management Research Unit, University Park, Pennsylvania, 16802;3. Professor (Sharpley), Department of Crop Soil and Environmental Sciences, University of Arkansas, Fayetteville, Arkansas 72701;4. Professor (Allen), Department of Agriculture, University of Maryland Eastern Shore, Princess Anne, Maryland 21853. |
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Abstract: | Abstract: Drainage ditches can be a key conduit of phosphorus (P) between agricultural soils of the Atlantic Coastal Plain and local surface waters, including the Chesapeake Bay. This study sought to quantify the effect of a common ditch management practice, sediment dredging, on fate of P in drainage ditches. Sediments from two drainage ditches that had been monitored for seven years and had similar characteristics (flow, P loadings, sediment properties) were sampled (0‐5 cm) after one of the ditches had been dredged, which removed fine textured sediments (clay = 41%) with high organic matter content (85 g/kg) and exposed coarse textured sediments (clay = 15%) with low organic matter content (2.2 g/kg). Sediments were subjected to a three‐phase experiment (equilibrium, uptake, and release) in recirculating 10‐m‐long, 0.2‐m‐wide, and 5‐cm‐deep flumes to evaluate their role as sources and sinks of P. Under conditions of low initial P concentrations in flume water, sediments from the dredged ditch released 13 times less P to the water than did sediments from the ditch that had not been dredged, equivalent to 24 mg dissolved P. However, the sediments from the dredged ditch removed 19% less P (76 mg) from the flume water when it was spiked with dissolved P to approximate long‐term runoff concentrations. Irradiation of sediments to destroy microorganisms revealed that biological processes accounted for up to 30% of P uptake in the coarse textured sediments of the dredged ditch and 18% in the fine textured sediments of the undredged ditch. Results indicate that dredging of coastal plain drainage ditches can potentially impact the P buffering capacity of ditches draining agricultural soils with a high potential for P runoff. |
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Keywords: | nonpoint source pollution nutrients transport and fate water conservation |
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