Direct measurements of the tile drain and groundwater flow route contributions to surface water contamination: From field-scale concentration patterns in groundwater to catchment-scale surface water quality

Publication date

2010

Authors

Rozemeijer, J.C.
Velde, Y. van der
Geer, F.C. van
Bierkens, M.F.P.
Boers, H.P.

Editors

Advisors

Supervisors

Document Type

Article

License

(c) UU Universiteit Utrecht, 2010

Abstract

Enhanced knowledge of water and solute pathways in catchments would improve the understanding of dynamics in water quality and would support the selection of appropriate water pollution mitigation options. For this study, we physically separated tile drain effluent and groundwater discharge from an agricultural field before it entered a 43.5-m ditch transect. Through continuous discharge measurements and weekly water quality sampling, we directly quantified the flow route contributions to surface water discharge and solute loading. Our multi-scale experimental approach allowed us to relate these measurements to field-scale NO3 concentration patterns in shallow groundwater and to continuous NO3 records at the catchment outlet. Our results show that the tile drains contributed 90e92% of the annual NO3 and heavy metal loads. Considering their crucial role in water and solute transport, enhanced monitoring and modeling of tile drainage are important for adequate water quality management.

Keywords

Water and solute transport, Flow route contributions, Catchment, Monitoring, Nitrate, Heavy metals, Groundwater, Surface water, Tile drains

Citation