Water environment research : a research publication of the Water Environment Federation | 2019

Investigating the role of organic carbon amendments and microbial denitrification gene abundance in nitrogen removal from experimental agricultural drainage ditches with low-grade weirs.

 
 
 
 
 
 

Abstract


Low-grade weirs placed within agricultural drainage ditches in the Lower Mississippi Alluvial Valley can be used as a management practice to enhance nitrogen removal. The addition of organic carbon amendments within ditches that contain weirs could further increase nitrogen removal. Through repeated trials, changes in NO3 - -N concentration between inflow and outflow were variable in the ditch without weirs, while only decreases in concentration were observed in ditches with weirs. Significant differences in NO3 - -N concentrations were observed between treatments, with greater removal of NO3 - -N observed in dissolved organic carbon treatments compared to control and particulate organic carbon treatments. At medium and high flow rates, respectively, dissolved organic carbon treatments resulted in greater NO3 - -N concentration decreases of 31.6% and 27.1% compared to 19% and 11.6% in particulate organic carbon treatments and 18.6% and 17.2% in control treatments. Significant effects of weirs and sampling date on nirS, nirK, nosZ, and 16S rRNA gene abundances were observed. Observed increases in NO3 - -N removal with organic carbon amendments, provides support for continued investigation on improving the efficacy of organic carbon amendments as a best management practice for NO3 - -N removal in agricultural drainage ditches.

Volume None
Pages None
DOI 10.1002/wer.1284
Language English
Journal Water environment research : a research publication of the Water Environment Federation

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