Anthropogenic impacts and quantitative sources of nitrate in a rural-urban canal using a combined PMF, δ15N/δ18O–NO3-, and MixSIAR approach
Nitrate (NO3−) pollution in irrigation canals is of great concern because it threatens canal water use; however, little is known about it at present. Herein, a combination of positive matrix factorization (PMF), isotope tracers, and Mixing Stable Isotope Analysis in R (MixSIAR) was developed to iden...
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Veröffentlicht in: | Environmental research 2024-06, Vol.251 (Pt 1), p.118587, Article 118587 |
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Zusammenfassung: | Nitrate (NO3−) pollution in irrigation canals is of great concern because it threatens canal water use; however, little is known about it at present. Herein, a combination of positive matrix factorization (PMF), isotope tracers, and Mixing Stable Isotope Analysis in R (MixSIAR) was developed to identify anthropogenic impacts and quantitative sources of NO3− in a rural-urban canal in China. The NO3− concentration (0.99–1.93 mg/L) of canal water increased along the flow direction and was higher than the internationally recognized eutrophication risk value in autumn and spring. The inputs of the Fuhe River, NH4+ fertilizer, soil nitrogen, manure & sewage, and rainfall were the main driving factors of canal water NO3− based on principal component analysis and PMF, which was supported by evidence from δ15N/δ18O–NO3-. According to the chemical and isotopic analyses, nitrogen transformation was weak, highlighting the potential of δ15N/δ18O–NO3- to trace NO3− sources in canal water. The MixSIAR and PMF results with a 50%) and anthropogenic impacts (NH4+ fertilizer plus manure & sewage, >37%) on NO3− in the entire canal, reflecting the effectiveness of the model analysis. According to the MixSIAR model, (1) higher NO3− concentration in canal water was caused by the general enhancement of human activities in spring and (2) NO3− source contributions were associated with land-use patterns. The high contributions of NH4+ fertilizer and manure & sewage showed inverse spatial variations, suggesting the necessity of reducing excessive fertilizer use in the agricultural area and controlling blind wastewater release in the urban area. These findings provide valuable insights into NO3− dynamics and fate for sustainable management of canal water resources. Nevertheless, long-term chemical and isotopic monitoring with alternative modeling should be strengthened for the accurate evaluation of canal NO3− pollution in future studies.
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•NO3− source of canal water was assessed by PMF and MixSIAR with δ15N/δ18O–NO3-.•NH4+ fertilizer and manure & sewage were the main anthropogenic NO3− sources.•The NO3− source contribution was controlled by land-use patterns with season.•Nitrification and denitrification were not significant in canal water. |
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ISSN: | 0013-9351 1096-0953 1096-0953 |
DOI: | 10.1016/j.envres.2024.118587 |