A Quantitative Approach for Identifying Nitrogen Sources in Complex Yeongsan River Watershed, Republic of Korea, Based on Dual Nitrogen Isotope Ratios and Hydrological Model

Author:

Hong Seoyeon1,Han Youngun2,Kim Jihae2,Lim Bo Ra1,Park Si-Young1,Choi Heeju3,Park Mi Rae1,Kim Eunmi1,Lee Soohyung4,Huh Yujeong1,Kim Kyunghyun5ORCID,Lee Won-Seok2,Kang Taewoo2ORCID,Kim Min-Seob1ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Environmental Measurement and Analysis Center, National Institute of Environmental Research, Incheon 22689, Republic of Korea

2. Yeongsan River Environment Research Center, National Institute of Environmental Research, Gwangju 61011, Republic of Korea

3. Global Testing and Certification Center, Korea Testing Laboratory, Seoul 08389, Republic of Korea

4. Fundamental Environmental Research Department, National Institute of Environmental Research, Incheon 22689, Republic of Korea

5. Water Quality Assessment Research Division, National Institute of Environmental Research, Incheon 22689, Republic of Korea

Abstract

Effective management of nitrate loading in complex river systems requires quantitative estimation to trace different nitrogen sources. This study aims to validate an integrated framework using soluble nitrogen isotope ratios (δ15N–NH4 and δ15N–NO3) and hydrological modeling (hydrological simulation program SPARROW) of the main stream and tributaries in the Yeongsan River to determine anthropogenic nitrogen fluxes among different land-use types in the complex river watershed. The δ15N–NH4 and δ15N–NO3 isotopic compositions varied across different land-use types (4.9 to 15.5‰ for δ15N–NH4 and −4.9 to 12.1‰ for δ15N–NO3), reflecting the different sources of nitrogen in the watershed (soil N including synthetic fertilizer N, manure N, and sewage treatment plant effluent N). We compared the soluble nitrogen isotopic compositions (δ15N–NH4 and δ15N–NO3) of the river water with various nitrogen sources (soil N, manure N, and sewage N) to assess their contribution, revealing that N from sewage treatment plant effluent as a point source was dominant during the dry season and N from forest- and soil-derived non-point sources was dominant due to intensive rainfall during the wet season. The coefficient of determination (R2) between the measured pollution load and the predicted pollution load calculated by the SPARROW model was 0.95, indicating a high correlation. In addition, the EMMA-based nitrogen contributions compared to the SPARROW-based nitrogen fluxes were similar to each other, indicating that large amounts of forest- and soil-derived N may be transported to the Yeongsan River watershed as non-point sources, along with the effect of sewage treatment plant effluent N as a point source. This study provides valuable insights for the formulation of management policies to control nitrogen inputs from point and non-point sources across different land-use types for the restoration of water quality and aquatic ecosystems in complex river systems. Given the recent escalation in human activity near aquatic environments, this framework is effective in estimating the quantitative contribution of individual anthropogenic nitrogen sources transported along riverine systems.

Funder

National Institute of Environment Research

Publisher

MDPI AG

Subject

Water Science and Technology,Aquatic Science,Geography, Planning and Development,Biochemistry

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