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Phosphorus loss in agricultural drainage: historical perspective and current research

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TLDR
The importance of agricultural sources to nonpoint source pollution of surface waters has been an environmental issue for decades because of the well-known role of P in eutrophication as mentioned in this paper.
Abstract
The importance of P originating from agricultural sources to the nonpoint source pollution of surface waters has been an environmental issue for decades because of the well-known role of P in eutrophication. Most previous research and nonpoint source control efforts have emphasized P losses by surface erosion and runoff because of the relative immobility of P in soils. Consequently, P leaching and losses of P via subsurface runoff have rarely heen considered important pathways for the movement of agricultural P to surface waters. However, there are situations where environmentally significant export of P in agricultural drainage has occurred (e.g., deep sandy soils, high organic matter soils, or soils with high soil P concentrations from long-term overfertilization andlor excessive use of organic wastes). In this paper we review research on P leaching and export in subsurface runoff and present overviews of ongoing research in the Atlantic Coastal Plain of the USA (Delaware), the midwestern USA (Indiana), and eastern Canada (Quehec). Our objectives are to illustrate the importance of agricultural drainage to nonpoint source pollution of surface waters and to emphasize the need for soil and water conservation practices that can minimize P losses in suhsurface runoff.

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Journal ArticleDOI

Eutrophication of freshwater and coastal marine ecosystems a global problem

TL;DR: This review examines how eutrophication influences the biomass and species composition of algae in both freshwater and costal marine systems and suggests that efforts to manage nutrient inputs to the seas will result in significant improvements in coastal zone water quality.
Journal ArticleDOI

Human Impact on Erodable Phosphorus and Eutrophication: A Global Perspective

TL;DR: An agricultural mass balance (budget) was calculated, which indicated that a large portion of this P accumulation occurs in agricultural soils, and showed that the rate of P accumulation is decreasing in developed nations but increasing in developing nations.
Journal ArticleDOI

Phosphorus legacy: overcoming the effects of past management practices to mitigate future water quality impairment.

TL;DR: This study examined the drivers of legacy P at the watershed scale, specifically in relation to the physical cascades and biogeochemical spirals of P along the continuum from soils to rivers and lakes and via surface and subsurface flow pathways.
Journal ArticleDOI

Groundwater recharge and agricultural contamination

TL;DR: For reactive con- taminants like NO 3 -, a combination of chemical, isoto- pic, and environmental-tracer analytical approaches might be required to resolve changing inputs from subse- quent alterations as causes of concentration gradients in groundwater Groundwater records derived from multi- component hydrostratigraphic data can be used to quan- tify recharge rates and residence times of water and dis- solved contaminants, document past variations in recharging contaminant loads, and identify natural contam- inant-remediation processes.
Journal ArticleDOI

Agricultural Phosphorus and Eutrophication: A Symposium Overview

TL;DR: A brief overview of the issues and options related to management of agricultural P that were discussed at a special symposium titled, “Agricultural Phosphorus and Eutrophication,” held at the November 1996 American Society of Agronomy annual meetings can be found in this article.
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