Linking Water Age, Nitrate Export Regime, and Nitrate Isotope Biogeochemistry in a Tile‐Drained Agricultural Field

Author:

Yu Zhongjie1ORCID,Hu Yinchao1,Gentry Lowell E.1,Yang Wendy H.23ORCID,Margenot Andrew J.4,Guan Kaiyu15ORCID,Mitchell Corey A.1ORCID,Hu Minpeng1

Affiliation:

1. Department of Natural Resources and Environmental Sciences University of Illinois at Urbana‐Champaign Urbana IL USA

2. Department of Plant Biology University of Illinois at Urbana‐Champaign Urbana IL USA

3. Department of Earth Science & Environmental Change University of Illinois at Urbana‐Champaign Urbana IL USA

4. Department of Crop Sciences University of Illinois at Urbana‐Champaign Urbana IL USA

5. Agroecosystem Sustainability Center University of Illinois at Urbana‐Champaign Urbana IL USA

Abstract

AbstractAccurately quantifying and predicting the reactive transport of nitrate () in hydrologic systems continues to be a challenge, due to the complex hydrological and biogeochemical interactions that underlie this transport. Recent advances related to time‐variant water age have led to a new method that probes water mixing and selection behaviors using StorAge Selection (SAS) functions. In this study, SAS functions were applied to investigate storage, water selection behaviors, and export regimes in a tile‐drained corn‐soybean field. The natural abundance stable nitrogen and oxygen isotopes of tile drainage were also measured to provide constraints on biogeochemical transformations. The SAS functions, calibrated using chloride measurements at tile drain outlets, revealed a strong young water preference during tile discharge generation. The use of a time‐variant SAS function for tile discharge generated unique water age dynamics that reveal an inverse storage effect driven by the activation of preferential flow paths and mechanically explain the observed variations in isotopes. Combining the water age estimates with isotope fingerprinting shed new light on export dynamics at the tile‐drain scale, where a large mixing volume and the lack of a strong vertical contrast in concentration resulted in chemostatic export regimes. For the first time, isotopes were embedded into a water age‐based transport model to model reactive transport under transient conditions. The results of this modeling study provided a proof‐of‐concept for the potential of coupling water age modeling with isotope analysis to elucidate the mechanisms driving reactive transport.

Funder

Illinois Nutrient Research and Education Council

National Institute of Food and Agriculture

National Science Foundation

Publisher

American Geophysical Union (AGU)

Subject

Water Science and Technology

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