Quantifying the response of nitrogen speciation to hydrology in the Chesapeake Bay Watershed using a multilevel modeling approach

Journal of American Water Resources Association
By: , and 

Links

Abstract

Excessive nitrogen (N) inputs to coastal waters can lead to severe eutrophication and different chemical forms of N exhibit varying levels of effectiveness in fueling primary production. Efforts to mitigate N fluxes from coastal watersheds are often guided by models that predict changes in N loads as a function of changes in land use, management practices, and climate. However, relatively little is known on the impacts of such changes on the relative fractions of different N forms. We leveraged a long-term dataset of N loads from over 100 river stations to investigate how the urn:x-wiley:1093474X:media:jawr12951:jawr12951-math-0001 fraction, that is, the ratio of urn:x-wiley:1093474X:media:jawr12951:jawr12951-math-0002 to total N (urn:x-wiley:1093474X:media:jawr12951:jawr12951-math-0003/TN), changes as a function of spatio-temporal changes in TN loads in the Chesapeake Bay watershed. We built a hierarchical model that separates the response of urn:x-wiley:1093474X:media:jawr12951:jawr12951-math-0004 to changes in TN load occurring at different scales: Across river stations, where differences in TN loads are largely driven by spatial differences in anthropogenic inputs, and within stations, where inter-annual variability in hydrology is a key driver of changes in TN loads. Results suggest that while increases in TN loads resulting from changes in anthropogenic inputs lead to an increase in the urn:x-wiley:1093474X:media:jawr12951:jawr12951-math-0005 fraction, a decrease in the urn:x-wiley:1093474X:media:jawr12951:jawr12951-math-0006 fraction may occur when increases in TN loads are driven by increased streamflow. These results are especially relevant in watersheds that may experience changes in N loads due to both management decisions and climate-driven changes in hydrology.

Study Area

Publication type Article
Publication Subtype Journal Article
Title Quantifying the response of nitrogen speciation to hydrology in the Chesapeake Bay Watershed using a multilevel modeling approach
Series title Journal of American Water Resources Association
DOI 10.1111/1752-1688.12951
Volume 58
Issue 6
Year Published 2022
Language English
Publisher Wiley
Contributing office(s) VA/WV Water Science Center
Description 13 p.
First page 792
Last page 804
Country United States
Other Geospatial Chesapeake Bay watershed
Google Analytic Metrics Metrics page
Additional publication details