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Contaminant Retention Potential of Forested Filter Strips Established as SMZs in the Piedmont of Georgia1
Authors:Alexandra P Pinho  Lawrence A Morris  C Rhett Jackson  W James White  Parshall B Bush  Antônio T Matos
Institution:1. Visiting Assistant Professor (Pinho), Laboratory of Biochemistry, Federal University of Mato Grosso do Sul, University City, MS CEP 79070‐900, Brazil;2. Professor (Morris and Jackson) and Former Graduate Student (White), D. B. Warnell School of Forest Resources and Professor Emeritus (Bush), Cooperative Extension Service, Agriculture Services Laboratory, University of Georgia, Athens, Georgia 30602;3. Professor (Matos), Department of Agricultural Engineering, Federal University of Vi?osa, MG CEP 36571‐000, Brazil.
Abstract:Abstract: It is common practice in the United States and elsewhere to maintain vegetated filter strips adjacent to streams to retain contaminants in surface runoff. Most research has evaluated contaminant retention in managed agricultural field strips, while relatively few studies have quantified retention in forested filter strips, particularly for dissolved contaminants. Plot‐scale overland flow experiments were conducted to evaluate the efficiency of natural forested filter strips established as streamside management zones (SMZs) for retaining phosphorus (P), atrazine, and picloram transported in runoff. Retention was evaluated for five different slope classes: 1‐2, 5‐7, 10‐12, 15‐17, and 20‐22%; two cover conditions: undisturbed forest floor (O horizon intact) and forest floor removed by raking; and two periods with contrasting soil moisture conditions: summer‐dry and winter‐wet season. Surface flow was collected at 0, 2, 4, 6, and 10 m within the filter strip to evaluate changes in solution concentration as it moved through the O horizon and the surface soil horizon mixing zone. On average, a 10 m length of forested SMZ with an undisturbed forest floor reduced initial solution concentration of total dissolved P by 51%, orthophosphate P by 49%, atrazine by 28%, and picloram by 5%. Percentages of mass retention through infiltration of water plus concentration reductions in runoff were 64% for total dissolved P, 62% for orthophosphate P, 47% for atrazine, and 28% for picloram for undisturbed forest floor conditions. Lower retention occurred following forest floor removal, particularly for P. Average dissolved P retention was 16% lower following forest floor removal. For undisturbed sites, differences in retention were more closely related to forest floor depth than to slope or antecedent soil moisture. These results indicate that forested SMZ filter strips provide a significant measure of surface water protection from dissolved P and herbicide delivery to surface water.
Keywords:best management practices  herbicides  nonpoint source pollution  nutrients  streamside management zones  vegetated filter strips
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