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Published online 4 January 2008
Published in J Environ Qual 37:107-113 (2008)
DOI: 10.2134/jeq2006.0505
© 2008 American Society of Agronomy, Crop Science Society of America, and Soil Science Society of America
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TECHNICAL REPORTS

Surface Water Quality

Agricultural Drainage Ditches Mitigate Phosphorus Loads as a Function of Hydrological Variability

R. Krögera,*, M. M. Hollanda, M. T. Mooreb and C. M. Cooperb

a University of Mississippi Field Station and Center for Water and Wetland Resources, 15 CR 2078, Abbeville MS 38601
b USDA-ARS, National Sedimentation Lab., Oxford, MS 38655

* Corresponding author (kroger{at}olemiss.edu).

Received for publication November 20, 2006. Phosphorus (P) loading from nonpoint sources, such as agricultural landscapes, contributes to downstream aquatic ecosystem degradation. Specifically, within the Mississippi watershed, enriched runoff contributions have far-reaching consequences for coastal water eutrophication and Gulf of Mexico hypoxia. Through storm events, the P mitigation capacity of agricultural drainage ditches under no-till cotton was determined for natural and variable rainfall conditions in north Mississippi. Over 2 yr, two experimental ditches were sampled monthly for total inorganic P concentrations in baseflow and on an event-driven basis for stormflows. Phosphorus concentrations, Manning's equations with a range of roughness coefficients for changes in vegetative densities within the ditches, and discharge volumes from Natural Resources Conservation Service dimensionless hydrographs combined to determine ranges in maximum and outflow storm P loads from the farms. Baseflow regressions and percentage reductions with P concentrations illustrated that the ditches alternated between being a sink and source for dissolved inorganic P and particulate P concentrations throughout the year. Storm event loads resulted in 5.5% of the annual applied fertilizer to be transported into the drainage ditches. The ditches annually reduced 43.92 ± 3.12% of the maximum inorganic effluent P load before receiving waters. Agricultural drainage ditches exhibited a fair potential for P mitigation and thus warrant future work on controlled drainage to improve mitigation capacity.

Abbreviations: DIP, dissolved inorganic phosphorus • NRCS, Natural Resources Conservation Service • PP, particulate phosphorus • TIP, total inorganic phosphorus







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