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Title: Uncertainty in nutrient loads from tile drained landscapes: Effect of sampling frequency, calculation algorithm, and compositing strategies

Author
item Williams, Mark
item King, Kevin
item MACRAE, MERRIN - University Of Waterloo
item Ford Iii, William
item VAN ESBROECK, CHRIS - University Of Waterloo
item BRUNKE, RICHARD - Ontario Ministry Of Agriculture
item ENGLISH, MICHAEL - Wilfrid Laurier University
item SCHIFF, SHERRY - University Of Waterloo

Submitted to: Journal of Hydrology
Publication Type: Peer Reviewed Journal
Publication Acceptance Date: 9/1/2015
Publication Date: 12/1/2015
Publication URL: http://handle.nal.usda.gov/10113/61827
Citation: Williams, M.R., King, K.W., Macrae, M.L., Ford III, W.I., Van Esbroeck, C., Brunke, R.I., English, M.C., Schiff, S.L. 2015. Uncertainty in nutrient loads from tile drained landscapes: Effect of sampling frequency, calculation algorithm, and compositing strategies. Journal of Hydrology. 530:306-316.

Interpretive Summary: Soluble nutrients from agricultural fields contribute to harmful algal blooms in receiving streams, lakes and coastal waters. Farmers implement management practices intended to reduce the delivery of soluble nutrients to streams. Assessment of the reduction requires accurate determination of the annual nutrient loads carried in the streams. Samples of the stream water are needed to determine the concentrations of the nutrients, and the load of nutrients is a product of their concentration multiplied by the volume of water represented by each sample. The objective of this study was to quantify the uncertainty in annual dissolved phosphorus and nitrate-nitrogen loads caused by infrequent sample collection and the method used to calculate load. Results showed that water sampling should be daily for dissolved phosphorus and every 3 to 7 days for nitrate-nitrogen to accurately estimate annual loads. Understanding the uncertainty in the measured water quality data from tile drained landscapes is important for comparing research results between studies and for determining which management practices influence nutrient loads.

Technical Abstract: Accurate estimates of annual nutrient loads are required to evaluate trends in water quality following changes in land use or management and to calibrate and validate water quality models. While much emphasis has been placed on understanding the uncertainty of watershed-scale nutrient load estimates in naturally drained systems, few studies have focused on artificially drained landscapes in the Midwestern US and Canada. The objective of this study was to quantify uncertainty in annual dissolved reactive phosphorus (DRP) and nitrate-nitrogen (NO3-N) load estimates from four tile drain outlets and two tile drained headwater watersheds in Ohio, USA and Ontario, Canada. High temporal resolution datasets of discharge (10 to 30 min) and nutrient concentration (2 hr to daily) were collected over a 1 to 2 year period at each site and used to calculate a ‘true’ nutrient load. Monte Carlo simulations were used to subsample the measured data to assess the effects of sample frequency, calculation algorithm, and compositing strategies on the uncertainty of load estimates. Results showed that uncertainty in annual DRP and NO3-N load estimates was influenced by both the sampling interval and the load estimation algorithm. Uncertainty in annual nutrient load estimates increased with increasing sampling interval for all of the load estimation algorithms tested. Continuous discharge measurements and linear interpolation of nutrient concentrations yielded the least amount of uncertainty, but still tended to underestimate ‘true’ load. Compositing strategies generally improved the precision of load estimates compared to discrete grab samples; however, they often reduced the accuracy. Based on the results of this study, we recommended that nutrient concentration be measured at least daily for DRP and every 3 to 7 days for NO3-N in tile drains and tile drained headwater watersheds to accurately (±10%) estimate annual loads.