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Published online 9 August 2006
Published in J Environ Qual 35:1825-1835 (2006)
DOI: 10.2134/jeq2006.0068
© 2006 American Society of Agronomy, Crop Science Society of America, and Soil Science Society of America
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TECHNICAL REPORTS

Vadose Zone Processes and Chemical Transport

Preferential Flow Estimates to an Agricultural Tile Drain with Implications for Glyphosate Transport

Wesley W. Stone* and John T. Wilson

U.S. Geological Survey, Indiana Water Science Center, 5957 Lakeside Blvd., Indianapolis, IN 46278

* Corresponding author (wwstone{at}usgs.gov)

Received for publication February 17, 2006. Agricultural subsurface drains, commonly referred to as tile drains, are potentially significant pathways for the movement of fertilizers and pesticides to streams and ditches in much of the Midwest. Preferential flow in the unsaturated zone provides a route for water and solutes to bypass the soil matrix and reach tile drains faster than predicted by traditional displacement theory. This paper uses chloride concentrations to estimate preferential flow contributions to a tile drain during two storms in May 2004. Chloride, a conservative anion, was selected as the tracer because of differences in chloride concentrations between the two sources of water to the tile drain, preferential and matrix flow. A strong correlation between specific conductance and chloride concentration provided a mechanism to estimate chloride concentrations in the tile drain throughout the storm hydrographs. A simple mixing analysis was used to identify the preferential flow component of the storm hydrograph. During two storms, preferential flow contributed 11 and 51% of total storm tile drain flow; the peak contributions, 40 and 81%, coincided with the peak tile drain flow. Positive relations between glyphosate [N-(phosphonomethyl)glycine] concentrations and preferential flow for the two storms suggest that preferential flow is an important transport pathway to the tile drain.




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Vadose Zone Journal
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