| Literature DB >> 24720609 |
Helen P Jarvie1, Andrew N Sharpley, Van Brahana, Tarra Simmons, April Price, Colin Neal, Alan J Lawlor, Darren Sleep, Sarah Thacker, Brian E Haggard.
Abstract
Karst landscapes are often perceived as highly vulnerable to agricultural phosphorus (P) loss, via solution-enlarged conduits that bypass P retention processes. Although attenuation of P concentrations has been widely reported within karst drainage, the extent to which this results from hydrological dilution, rather than P retention, is poorly understood. This is of strategic importance for understanding the resilience of karst landscapes to P inputs, given increasing pressures for intensified agricultural production. Here hydrochemical tracers were used to account for dilution of P, and to quantify net P retention, along transport pathways between agricultural fields and emergent springs, for the karst of the Ozark Plateau, midcontinent USA. Up to ∼ 70% of the annual total P flux and ∼ 90% of the annual soluble reactive P flux was retained, with preferential retention of the most bioavailable (soluble reactive) P fractions. Our results suggest that, in some cases, karst drainage may provide a greater P sink than previously considered. However, the subsequent remobilization and release of the retained P may become a long-term source of slowly released "legacy" P to surface waters.Entities:
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Year: 2014 PMID: 24720609 DOI: 10.1021/es405585b
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Environ Sci Technol ISSN: 0013-936X Impact factor: 9.028