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Variations in Base‐Flow Nitrate Flux in a First‐Order Stream and Riparian Zone1
Authors:Jonathan T Angier  Gregory W McCarty
Institution:1. Respectively, Environmental Scientist, USDA/ARS‐ANRI, Environmental Quality Laboratory, Beltsville Agricultural Research Center—West, Building 007, Room 214, 10300 Baltimore Avenue, Beltsville, Maryland 20705;2. Soil Scientist, USDA/ARS‐ANRI, Environmental Quality Laboratory, Beltsville Agricultural Research Center—West, Building 007, Room 202, 10300 Baltimore Avenue, Beltsville, Maryland 20705
Abstract:Abstract: Nonpoint source pollution, which contributes to contamination of surface waters, is difficult to control. Some pollutants, particularly nitrate (inline image), are predominantly transmitted through ground water. Riparian buffer zones have the potential to remove contaminants from ground water and reduce the amount of inline image that enters surface water. This is a justification for setting aside vegetated buffer strips along waterways. Many riparian zone hydrologic models assume uniform ground‐water flow through organic‐rich soil under reducing conditions, leading to effective removal of ground‐water inline image prior to discharge into a stream. However, in a small first‐order stream in the mid‐Atlantic coastal plain, base‐flow generation was highly variable (spatially and temporally). Average base‐flow inline image loads were greater in winter than summer, and higher during a wetter year than in dryer years. Specific sections of the stream consistently received greater amounts of high inline image ground water than others. Areas within the riparian zone responsible for most of the inline image exported from the watershed are termed “critical areas.” Over this 5‐year study, most of the inline image exported during base flow originated from a critical area comprising less than 10% of the total riparian zone land area. Allocation of resources to address and improve mitigation function in critical areas should be a priority for continued riparian zone research.
Keywords:surface water/ground‐water interactions  nonpoint source pollution  nutrients  transport and fate  ground‐water hydrology  wetlands
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