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N budgets and aquatic uptake in the Ipswich River basin, northeastern Massachusetts
Authors
Alexander
Billen
+33 more
Boxman
Boyer
Caraco
Carlozzi
Charles Hopkinson
Correll
Dunne
Edward Rastetter
Fenneman
Fisher
Galloway
Hamilton
Howarth
Jordan
Joseph Vallino
Likens
Michael Williams
Mulholland
Mulholland
Newbold
Peterjohn
Peterson
Seitzinger
Seitzinger
Sokal
Tank
Turner
Valderrama
Valiela
Van Breemen
Vitousek
Williams
Williams
Publication date
5 November 2004
Publisher
'American Geophysical Union (AGU)'
Doi
Abstract
Author Posting. © American Geophysical Union, 2004. This article is posted here by permission of American Geophysical Union for personal use, not for redistribution. The definitive version was published in Water Resources Research 40 (2004): W11201, doi:10.1029/2004WR003172.We calculated N budgets and conducted nutrient uptake experiments to evaluate the fate of N in the aquatic environment of the Ipswich River basin, northeastern Massachusetts. A mass balance indicates that the basin retains about 50% of gross N inputs, mostly in terrestrial components of the landscape, and the loss and retention of total nitrogen (TN) in the aquatic environment was about 9% of stream loading. Uptake lengths of PO4 and NH4 were measurable in headwater streams, but NO3 uptake was below detection (minimum detection limit = 0.05 μM). Retention or loss of NO3 was observed in a main stem reach bordered by wetland habitat. Nitrate removal in urban headwater tributaries was because of water withdrawals and denitrification during hypoxic events and in ponded wetlands with long water residence times. A mass balance using an entire river network indicates that basin-wide losses due to aquatic denitrification are considerably lower than estimates from several recent studies and range from 4 to 16% of TDN in stream loading. Withdrawals for domestic use restrict the runoff of headwater catchments from reaching the main stem during low base flow periods, thereby contributing to the spatial and temporal regulation of N export from headwater tributaries.This research was funded by grants DEB- 9726862 and OCE-9726921 (NSF)
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