Multidecadal trajectory of riverine nitrogen and phosphorus dynamics in rural catchments

Mise à jour : 01 juillet 2018
0
climat
bassin versant
dénitrification
météorologie

The long-term evolution of nutrient dynamics in rivers under changing external forcings, termed hereafter trajectory, is influenced by local human activities and regional climatic variations. Here, we investigate nitrogen (N) and phosphorus (P) dynamics in seven meso‐scale agricultural catchments (median size 800 km2) of western France from seasonal to multi‐decadal time scales (1970‐2016). Results show that, in these catchments dominated by shallow groundwater, long‐term nitrate exports responded to variations of the agricultural N surplus with time lags of approximately 10 years. Presence of legacy N storage, related to the catchments' denitrification capacity, was found to increase response times. In contrast, P trends were predominantly controlled by decreasing point source emissions during the study period, and P dynamics were influenced by in‐stream retention/remobilization processes that hampered precise quantification of land‐to‐river diffuse transport processes. Occurrence of inter‐annual climate variations during three 5 to 10‐year dry‐wet cycles, influenced by the North Atlantic Oscillation (NAO), affected N and P dynamics with persistent inter‐annual hysteresis patterns among catchment and years. Thus, water quality assessment programs should cover at least five years to decipher the effect of mitigation measures from climate variations.

Notice détaillée

Multidecadal trajectory of riverine nitrogen and phosphorus dynamics in rural catchments
Type de document
Publication scientifique
Auteurs personnes
Minaudo,C.
Gascuel-Odoux, Chantal
Gruau,Gérard
Dupas,Rémi
Éditeur
s. n.
Date de parution
01 juillet 2018
Langue
Anglais