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Nitrogen (N) is an important nutrient as it often limits productivity, but in excess can impair water quality. Most studies on watershed N cycling have occurred in upland forested catchments where snowmelt dominates N export; fewer studies have focused on low-relief watersheds that lack snow. We examined watershed N cycling in three adjacent, low-relief watersheds in the Upper Coastal Plain of the southeastern United States to better understand the role of hydrological flowpaths and biological transformations of N at the watershed scale. Groundwater was the dominant source of nitrified N to stream water in 2 of the 3 watersheds, while atmospheric deposition comprised 28% of stream water nitrate in one watershed. The greater atmospheric contribution may have been due to the larger stream channel area relative to total watershed area or the dominance of shallow subsurface flowpaths contributing to stream flow in this watershed. There was a positive relationship between temperature and stream water ammonium concentrations and a negative relationship between temperature and stream water nitrate concentrations in each watershed suggesting that N cycling processes (i.e., nitrification, denitrification) varied seasonally. However, there were no clear patterns in the importance of denitrification in different water pools possibly because a variety of factors (i.e., assimilatory uptake, dissimilatory uptake, mixing) affected nitrate concentrations. Together, these results highlight the hydrological and biological controls on N cycling in low-gradient watersheds, and variability in N delivery flowpaths among adjacent watersheds with similar physical characteristics.

Contact Phone
Publication Date
Project Title
Short-rotation woody biomass sustainability
Contact Email
griffithsna@ornl.gov
DOI
10.1002/2015JG003189
Data Source
Data associated with this manuscript are located on the KDF ('Short-Rotation Woody Biomass Sustainability Project: Pre-treatment Water Quality and Hydrology Data')
Contact Person
Natalie A. Griffiths
Contact Organization
Oak Ridge National Laboratory
Author(s)
Natalie A. Griffiths , C. Rhett Jackson , Jeffrey J. McDonnell , Julian Klaus , Enhao Du , Menberu M. Bitew
WBS Project Number
4.2.2.41
Funded from the U.S. Department of Energy, Office of Energy Efficiency and Renewable Energy, Bioenergy Technologies Office.

The National Hydrography Dataset (NHD) and Watershed Boundary Dataset (WBD) are used to portray surface water on The National Map. The NHD represents the drainage network with features such as rivers, streams, canals, lakes, ponds, coastline, dams, and streamgages. The WBD represents drainage basins as enclosed areas in eight different size categories. The NHD is portrayed on the US Topo map product produced by the USGS and the NHD and WBD can be viewed on the Hydrography Viewer or the general mapping oriented The National Map Viewer.

Contact Phone
Usage Policy
Acknowledgment of the originating agencies would be appreciated in products derived from these data.
Contact Email
ask@usgs.gov
Bioenergy Category
Author(s)
U.S. Geological Survey
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