N-15 IDENTIFICATION OF NONPOINT SOURCES OF NITRATE CONTAMINATION BENEATH CROPLAND IN THE NEBRASKA PANHANDLE - 2 CASE-STUDIES

被引:26
作者
EXNER, ME
SPALDING, RF
机构
[1] Conservation and Survey Division, Institute of Agriculture and Natural Resources, University of Nebraska, Lincoln
[2] Water Center, Department of Agronomy, Institute of Agriculture and Natural Resources, Lincoln
关键词
D O I
10.1016/0883-2927(94)90054-X
中图分类号
P3 [地球物理学]; P59 [地球化学];
学科分类号
0708 ; 070902 ;
摘要
Monitoring of municipal wells near the town of Sidney and domestic wells near Oshkosh in Nebraska's Panhandle indicated the nitrate-nitrogen (NO3-N) levels were increasing and exceeded the maximum contaminant level of 10 mg/l NO3-N in several wells. Both areas are located in narrow stream valleys that are characterized by well-drained soils, highly permeable intermediate vadose zones, shallow depths to groundwater, and intensive irrigated corn production. Both areas also have a large confined cattle feeding operation near the suspected contamination and potentially could be contaminated by more than one nitrate source. At Sidney NO3-N concentrations were measured in 13 monitoring wells installed along an east-west transect in the direction of groundwater flow, 26 private wells, and eight municipal wells. Nitrate-nitrogen concentrations were homogeneous beneath a 5 km by 1.2 km area and averaged 11.3 +/- 1.8 mg/l NO3-N. The delta N-15-NO3 values in the monitoring and municipal wells had a narrow range from +5.8 to +8.8 parts per thousand. The isotopic ratios are indicative of a mixed source of nitrate contamination, which originates from agronomic (commercial fertilizer N and mineralized N) N and animal waste. Both commercial fertilizer N and animal wastes are applied to the irrigated fields. Nitrate-nitrogen concentrations in two multilevel samplers installed downgradient from irrigated cornfields at the Oshkosh site averaged 20.1 +/- 13.3 mg/l NO3-N and 37.3 +/- 8.2 mg/l NO3-N. The delta N-15-NO3 values spanned a narrow range from +3.5 to +5.9 parts per thousand and averaged +4.0 +/- 0.5 parts per thousand and +5.0 +/- 0.6 parts per thousand. These low values are indicative of leachates from commercial fertilizer applied to the irrigated fields.
引用
收藏
页码:73 / 81
页数:9
相关论文
共 30 条
[1]  
A.P.H.A. (American Public Health Association), Standard Methods for the Examination of Water and Wastewater, (1989)
[2]  
Bautista, Wallender, Spatial variability of infiltration in furrows, Trans. Am. Soc. Agric. Eng., 28, pp. 1846-1851, (1985)
[3]  
Bautista, Wallender, Spatial Variability of Infiltration in Furrows, Transactions of the ASAE, 28, (1985)
[4]  
Berndt, Sources and distribution of nitrate in ground water at a farmed field irrigated with sewage treatment-plant effluent, Tallahasee, Florida, U.S. Geol. Surv. Water-Res. Invest. Rept., (1990)
[5]  
Nitrate Contamination: Exposure, Consequence, and Control, (1991)
[6]  
Bremner, Edwards, Determination and Isotope-Ratio Analysis of Different Forms of Nitrogen in Soils: I. Apparatus and Procedure for Distillation and Determination of Ammonium1, Soil Science Society of America Journal, 29, pp. 504-507, (1965)
[7]  
Bremner, Keeney, Steam distillation method for determination of ammonium, nitrate, and nitrite, Analyt. chim. Acta, 32, pp. 485-495, (1965)
[8]  
Bryda, Nitrate-nitrogen profiles documenting land use practice effects on ground water in and around Sidney, Nebraska, M.S. thesis, (1988)
[9]  
Burbach, Groundwater quality management alternatives: South Platte NRD and the city of Sidney, Nebraska, M.S. thesis, (1988)
[10]  
Cline, Denitrification and isotopic fractionation in two contrasting marine environments: the eastern tropical North Pacific Ocean and the Cariaco Trench, Ph.D. dissertation, (1973)