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Library Controls on the phosphorus content of fine stream bed sediments in agricultural headwater catchments at the landscape-scale

Controls on the phosphorus content of fine stream bed sediments in agricultural headwater catchments at the landscape-scale

Controls on the phosphorus content of fine stream bed sediments in agricultural headwater catchments at the landscape-scale

Resource information

Date of publication
декабря 2011
Resource Language
ISBN / Resource ID
AGRIS:US201400192718
Pages
352-363

There have been no landscape-scale assessments which quantify the relative importance of the organic and mineral properties of BS (bed sediment) and associated catchment characteristics (geology, land cover and mean topsoil phosphorus (P) content) for BSP concentration. Mid infra red diffuse reflectance spectrometry was applied to estimate the quantities of organic matter, dithionite extractable aluminium- (Ald) and iron (Fed), kaolinite, dioctahedral clay and mica (D&M) minerals in 1052 snapshot samples of fine (Fed>topsoil P=kaolinite=residualiron> organic matter=Ce>D&M>mineral SSA. No single component accounted for more than 36% of the variance in BSP. Multiple regression – including a classification of bedrock lithology and proportions of arable and grassland by area – accounted for 61.9% of the variance in BSP. The proportion of arable and grassland by area in each catchment was also a statistically significant predictor of BSP. Across this large region – with widely differing geology and soils – Fed in BS is more strongly associated with kaolinite than D&M minerals because iron-oxyhydroxides and kaolinite form contemporaneously during pedogenesis. The SSA of fine bed sediments is largely determined by catchment area, fitted accurately using a power function.

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Authors and Publishers

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

Rawlins, Barry G.

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