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Library role of irrigation runoff and winter rainfall on dissolved organic carbon loads in an agricultural watershed

role of irrigation runoff and winter rainfall on dissolved organic carbon loads in an agricultural watershed

role of irrigation runoff and winter rainfall on dissolved organic carbon loads in an agricultural watershed

Resource information

Date of publication
December 2013
Resource Language
ISBN / Resource ID
AGRIS:US201400161851
Pages
1-10

We investigated the role of land use/land cover and agriculture practices on stream dissolved organic carbon (DOC) dynamics in the Willow Slough watershed (WSW) from 2006 to 2008. The 415km² watershed in the northern Central Valley, California is covered by 31% of native vegetation and the remaining 69% of agricultural fields (primarily alfalfa, tomatoes, and rice). Stream discharge and weekly DOC concentrations were measured at eight nested subwatersheds to estimate the DOC loads and yields (loads/area) using the USGS developed stream load estimation model, LOADEST. Stream DOC concentrations peaked at 18.9mgL⁻¹ during summer irrigation in the subwatershed with the highest percentage of agricultural land use, demonstrating the strong influence of agricultural activities on summer DOC dynamics. These high concentrations contributed to DOC yields increasing up to 1.29gm⁻² during the 6 month period of intensive agricultural activity. The high DOC yields from the most agricultural subwatershed during the summer irrigation period was similar throughout the study, suggesting that summer DOC loads from irrigation runoff would not change significantly in the absence of major changes in crops or irrigation practices. In contrast, annual DOC yields varied from 0.89 to 1.68gm⁻²yr⁻¹ for the most agricultural watershed due to differences in winter precipitation. This suggests that variability in the annual DOC yields will be largely determined by the winter precipitation, which can vary significantly from year to year. Changes in precipitation patterns and intensities as well as agricultural practices have potential to considerably alter the DOC dynamics.

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Authors and Publishers

Author(s), editor(s), contributor(s)

Oh, Neung-Hwan
Pellerin, Brian A.
Bachand, Philip A.M.
Hernes, Peter J.
Bachand, Sandra M.
Ohara, Noriaki
Kavvas, M. Levent
Bergamaschi, Brian A.
Horwath, William R.

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