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Evaluating Agricultural Best Management Practices in Tile-Drained Subwatersheds of the Mackinaw River, Illinois
- Source :
- Journal of Environmental Quality. 40:1215-1228
- Publication Year :
- 2011
- Publisher :
- Wiley, 2011.
-
Abstract
- Best management practices (BMPs) are widely promoted in agricultural watersheds as a means of improving water quality and ameliorating altered hydrology. We used a paired watershed approach to evaluate whether focused outreach could increase BMP implementation rates and whether BMPs could induce watershed-scale (4000 ha) changes in nutrients, suspended sediment concentrations, or hydrology in an agricultural watershed in central Illinois. Land use was >90% row crop agriculture with extensive subsurface tile drainage. Outreach successfully increased BMP implementation rates for grassed waterways, stream buffers, and strip-tillage within the treatment watershed, which are designed to reduce surface runoff and soil erosion. No significant changes in nitrate-nitrogen (NO-N), total phosphorus (TP), dissolved reactive phosphorus, total suspended sediment (TSS), or hydrology were observed after implementation of these BMPs over 7 yr of monitoring. Annual NO-N export (39-299 Mg) in the two watersheds was equally exported during baseflow and stormflow. Mean annual TP export was similar between the watersheds (3.8 Mg) and was greater for TSS in the treatment (1626 ± 497 Mg) than in the reference (940 ± 327 Mg) watershed. Export of TP and TSS was primarily due to stormflow (>85%). Results suggest that the BMPs established during this study were not adequate to override nutrient export from subsurface drainage tiles. Conservation planning in tile-drained agricultural watersheds will require a combination of surface-water BMPs and conservation practices that intercept and retain subsurface agricultural runoff. Our study emphasizes the need to measure conservation outcomes and not just implementation rates of conservation practices.
- Subjects :
- Crops, Agricultural
Conservation of Natural Resources
Geologic Sediments
Environmental Engineering
Watershed
Nitrogen
Row crop
Agricultural engineering
Management, Monitoring, Policy and Law
Hydrology (agriculture)
Rivers
Water Supply
Water Movements
Water Pollution, Chemical
Waste Management and Disposal
Water Science and Technology
Hydrology
Nitrates
Baseflow
business.industry
Agriculture
Phosphorus
Pollution
Tile drainage
Environmental science
Illinois
Seasons
Water quality
Surface runoff
business
Subjects
Details
- ISSN :
- 00472425
- Volume :
- 40
- Database :
- OpenAIRE
- Journal :
- Journal of Environmental Quality
- Accession number :
- edsair.doi.dedup.....d84d69542759e0d9562d632d54dd0158
- Full Text :
- https://doi.org/10.2134/jeq2010.0119