Dissolved organic matter compositional change and biolability during two storm runoff events in a small sgricultural watershed

Journal of Geophysical Research: Biogeosciences
By: , and 

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Abstract

Agricultural watersheds are globally pervasive, supporting fundamentally different organic matter source, composition, and concentration profiles in comparison to natural systems. Similar to natural systems, agricultural storm runoff exports large amounts of organic carbon from agricultural land into waterways. But intense management of upper soil layers, waterway channelization, wetland and riparian habitat removal, and postharvest vegetation removal promise to uniquely drive organic matter release to waterways. During a winter first flush and a subsequent storm event, this study investigated the influence of a small agricultural watershed on dissolved organic matter (DOM) source, composition, and biolability. Storm water discharge released strongly terrestrial yet biolabile (23 to 32%) dissolved organic carbon (DOC). Following a 21 day bioassay, a parallel factor analysis identified an 80% reduction in a protein-like (phenylpropyl) component (C2) that was previously correlated to lignin phenol concentration, and a 10% reduction in a humic-like, terrestrially sourced component (C4). Storm-driven releases tripled DOC concentration (from 2.8 to 8.7 mg L−1) during the first flush event in comparison to base flow and were terrestrially sourced, with an eightfold increase in vascular plant derived lignin phenols (23.0 to 185 μg L−1). As inferred from system hydrology, lignin composition, and nitrate as a groundwater tracer, an initial pulse of dilute water from the upstream watershed caused a counterclockwise DOC hysteresis loop. DOC concentrations peaked after 3.5 days, with the delay between peak discharge and peak DOC attributed to storm water hydrology and a period of initial water repellency of agricultural soils, which delayed DOM leaching.

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Publication type Article
Publication Subtype Journal Article
Title Dissolved organic matter compositional change and biolability during two storm runoff events in a small sgricultural watershed
Series title Journal of Geophysical Research: Biogeosciences
DOI 10.1002/2017JG003935
Volume 122
Issue 10
Year Published 2017
Language English
Publisher American Geophysical Union
Contributing office(s) WMA - Observing Systems Division
Description 17 p.
First page 2634
Last page 2650
Country United States
State California
Other Geospatial Willow Slough Mouth
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