Literature DB >> 10805229

Nitrogen flux and sources in the Mississippi River Basin.

D A Goolsby1, W A Battaglin, B T Aulenbach, R P Hooper.   

Abstract

Nitrogen from the Mississippi River Basin is believed to be at least partly responsible for the large zone of oxygen-depleted water that develops in the Gulf of Mexico each summer. Historical data show that concentrations of nitrate in the Mississippi River and some of its tributaries have increased by factors of 2 to more than 5 since the early 1900s. We have used the historical streamflow and concentration data in regression models to estimate the annual flux of nitrogen (N) to the Gulf of Mexico and to determine where the nitrogen originates within the Mississippi Basin. Results show that for 1980-1996 the mean annual total N flux to the Gulf of Mexico was 1,568,000 t/year. The flux was approximately 61% nitrate as N, 37% organic N, and 2% ammonium as N. The flux of nitrate to the Gulf has approximately tripled in the last 30 years with most of the increase occurring between 1970 and 1983. The mean annual N flux has changed little since the early 1980s, but large year-to-year variations in N flux occur because of variations in precipitation. During wet years the N flux can increase by 50% or more due to flushing of nitrate that has accumulated in the soils and unsaturated zones in the basin. The principal source areas of N are basins in southern Minnesota, Iowa, Illinois, Indiana, and Ohio that drain agricultural land. Basins in this region yield 800 to more than 3100 kg total N/km2 per year to streams, several times the N yield of basins outside this region. Assuming conservative transport of N in the Mississippi River, streams draining Iowa and Illinois contribute on average approximately 35% of the total N discharged by the Mississippi River to the Gulf of Mexico. In years with high precipitation they can contribute a larger percentage.

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Year:  2000        PMID: 10805229     DOI: 10.1016/s0048-9697(99)00532-x

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Sci Total Environ        ISSN: 0048-9697            Impact factor:   7.963


  9 in total

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4.  Long-term fate of nitrate fertilizer in agricultural soils.

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6.  Surface Depression and Wetland Water Storage Improves Major River Basin Hydrologic Predictions.

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7.  Nutrient Loads Flowing into Coastal Waters from the Main Rivers of China (2006-2012).

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8.  The carbon dioxide system on the Mississippi River-dominated continental shelf in the northern Gulf of Mexico: 1. Distribution and air-sea CO2 flux.

Authors:  Wei-Jen Huang; Wei-Jun Cai; Yongchen Wang; Steven E Lohrenz; Michael C Murrell
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9.  Iowa stream nitrate and the Gulf of Mexico.

Authors:  Christopher S Jones; Jacob K Nielsen; Keith E Schilling; Larry J Weber
Journal:  PLoS One       Date:  2018-04-12       Impact factor: 3.240

  9 in total

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