Concerns related to climate change have resulted in an increasing interest in the importance of hydrological events such as droughts in affecting biogeochemical responses of watersheds. The effects of an unusually dry summer in 2002 had a marked impact on the biogeochemistry of three watersheds in t
Cows, humans and hydrology in the nitrogen dynamics of a grazed rural watershed
β Scribed by Rachel R. Freifelder; Stephen V. Smith; Richard H. Bennett
- Publisher
- Elsevier Science
- Year
- 1998
- Tongue
- English
- Weight
- 421 KB
- Volume
- 52
- Category
- Article
- ISSN
- 0301-4797
No coin nor oath required. For personal study only.
β¦ Synopsis
Nitrogen inputs to the Tomales, California, watershed (a rural area of 56 000 ha) from the atmosphere are about equal to outputs via runoff and groundwater flow. This balance was initially interpreted to suggest that the system was neither releasing nor taking up nitrogen. A more detailed budgetary analysis suggests otherwise.
In the present analysis, food imported for dairy cows and humans, waste management and milk export are incorporated into the nitrogen budget. Cattle contributions to the budget are influenced by nutrition as a function of age, lactation state and milk yield, as well as population density. The cow contribution distinguishes grazing (i.e. internal nutrient cycling) from the introduction of nitrogen in feed grown outside the watershed, and the budget incorporates nitrogen losses due to waste management and export of milk. Food imported for cattle is almost 10 times the import for humans, but cows and humans contribute approximately equal net nitrogen additions to the system. This inclusion of cows and humans in the nitrogen budget demonstrates that nitrogen inputs to the system exceed hydrological outputs by about 2 kg ha -1 yr -1 . Alternative sinks which may account for this 'extra nitrogen' include storage in biomass or soil organic matter, or loss from the system by the difference between nitrogen fixation and denitrification. These alternatives become testable hypotheses for future research.
π SIMILAR VOLUMES
## Abstract Preferential flow is known to influence hillslope hydrology in many areas around the world. Most research on preferential flow has been performed in temperate regions. Preferential infiltration has also been found in semiβarid regions, but its impact on the hydrology of these regions is
## Abstract An adequately tested soil and water assessment tool (SWAT) model was applied to the runoff and sediment yield of a small agricultural watershed in eastern India using generated rainfall. The capability of the model for generating rainfall was evaluated for a period of 18 years (1981β199
The relationship between stream discharge and the concentration of dierent solutes reΒ―ects the hydrological processes occurring in a catchment, but is also strongly aected by antecedent moisture conditions. In this study, the eects of antecedent conditions were examined for a small forested watershe
## Abstract To investigate the effects of storm flow samplings on the evaluation of DIN and SO~4~^2β^ budgets, we conducted storm flow samplings and discrete interval (weekly) samplings of stream water, throughfall, and stemflow. This investigation lasted for three years and took place in a small f