wAbstract
@Although the ability of stream riparian buffers to reduce nitrate
in groundwater has been promoted, the effectiveness of nitrate
removal in riparian zones with upwelling springs and overland
flows is not well understood. The relationship between groundwater-fed
surface flow path hydrodynamics and nitrate removal was investigated
in three riparian zones in southern Ontario, Canada. Spring-fed
surface flow in which cedar forests at the upland perimeter of
the riparian zones occurred as rivulets linked to shallow horizontal
pipe systems in peat deposits. These rivulet-pipe systems transported
water at rates that were up to 13~ faster than in downslope portions
of the riparian zones where diffuse flow paths occurred in marshes
and areas of mixed cedar-grass vegetation. Bromide tracers indicated
the exchange of water along surface flow paths between areas of
faster flow and storage zones in soil pore-water or in slow moving
and stagnant pools of surface water. High nitrate concentrations
in upwelling groundwater showed little decline for distances of
up to 100 m along rivulet-pipe networks suggesting that these
flow paths were ineffective in nitrate removal. Nitrate concentrations
declined by 50-95 during the summer in areas of diffuse surface
flow in the three riparian zones. Analysis of the distribution
of Β15N-NO3 values suggests that
denitrification is an important mechanism of nitrate removal.
Nitrate concentrations also declined by 25-80 along diffuse surface
flow paths in the spring season when the riparian water table
was at or above the ground surface. Cold water temperatures (1-6)
limited biological removal and most of this nitrate decline resulted
from dilution by exfiltration of groundwater that had a low nitrate
concentration as a result of denitrification during subsurface
transport. Measurements in one of the riparian zones showed that,
despite this nitrate dilution, the increase in runoff volume resulted
in an 8~ larger nitrate-N flux entering the stream from riparian
surface flow paths in the spring vs. summer. This study indicates
that riparian zones with groundwater-fed surface flow paths vary
in their ability to deplete nitrate. A conceptual model linking
different surface flow patterns to solute exchanges with riparian
soils and water residence time is developed to understand and
predict nitrate removal effectiveness.
Keywords: Denitrification; Overland flow; Nitrate; Riparian zonex
1. Introduction
2. Study sites
3. Methods
@3.1. Surface hydrology
@3.2. Bromide injection
@3.3. Surface water chemistry
4. Results
@4.1. Surface hydrology
@4.2. Bromide tracer experiments
@4.3. Surface flow path chemistry
5. Discussion
@5.1. Surface flow path hydrology
@5.2. Surface flow path chemistry
6. Conclusions and conceptual model
Acknowledgements
References