4.7 Article

Nitrogen inputs to a river course in a heavily impacted watershed: A combined hydrochemical and isotopic evaluation (Oglio River Basin, N Italy)

Journal

SCIENCE OF THE TOTAL ENVIRONMENT
Volume 466, Issue -, Pages 924-938

Publisher

ELSEVIER SCIENCE BV
DOI: 10.1016/j.scitotenv.2013.07.092

Keywords

NO3- contamination; Surface-groundwater interaction; Stable isotopes; Hydrological modelling; Po plain

Funding

  1. CNR-IGG
  2. Regione Lombardia, Department of Agriculture
  3. Lombardy Foundation for the Environment (FLA)

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This study aims at evaluating sources and processes affecting NO3- concentrations in the Oglio River. Five sampling campaigns considered the main watercourse, tributaries, point pollution sources, springs, and groundwater. Physico-chemical parameters, N forms, B, Sr2+, stable isotopes (delta H-2(H2O), delta(OH2O)-O-18, delta N-15(NO3), delta O-18(NO3), delta B-11) and discharge were measured. Hydrological modelling was performed using mass balance and End Member Mixing Analysis equations. During the irrigation period, in the upstream reach, up to 90% of the natural river flow is diverted for irrigation and industrial purposes; excess water drained from agricultural fields is returned to river in the downstream reach. Results evidenced, in the middle reach, a large input of NO3--rich groundwater which could be quantified using hydrological modelling. Groundwater inputs are responsible for the sharp, tenfold increase in NO3- in the river water, from 2.2-4.4 up to 33.5 mg L-1, and are more evident in summer, when discharge is lower. Nevertheless, river water preserves its natural B isotopic compositionf indicating that the two tracers do not have a common origin and are not co-migrant., In the lower plain, surface-groundwater interconnections and human disturbances in the water cycle favour the recycling of the compounds in the environment, and lead to a similarity in composition of the different water bodies (Oglio River, tributaries and groundwater). The long lasting agronomical practices have profoundly modified the surface-groundwater equilibrium and chemical characteristics, resulting in a highly buffered system. Infiltrating irrigation water leaches down NO which is subsequently denitrified; when returned to the Oglio River, groundwater modifies the river water composition by dilution, in the case of NW, or by addition, for other constituents (e.g. cl(-), B). The results of this study indicate that, in order to reduce the NO transport towards the Adriatic Sea, groundwater contamination should be addressed first, with expected long recovery times. (C) 2013 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.

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