Affiliations: State Key Laboratory of Environmental Aquatic
Chemistry, Research Center for Eco-Environmental Sciences, Chinese Academy of
Sciences,Beijing 100085, China | China Institute of Water Resources and Hydropower
Research, Beijing 100038, China
Abstract: The spatial and temporal variability of nutrients and suspended
solids were investigated for two years in a 1.8 km agricultural headwater
stream, located by Chaohu Lake, southeastern China. The stream form was greatly
modified by human activities into channelized, pond and estuary shapes. The
stream could be divided into 4channelized reaches (1.3 km), a pond reach (0.15
km) and 3 estuary reaches (0.36 km). It was found that nutrients and TSS
concentrations in the stream showed temporal variability, and higher
concentrations occurred in months with high precipitation and intensive
agricultural activities. And, retention of total nitrogen (TN), nitrate
(NO^-_3-N),ammonium (NH^+_4-N) and total
suspended solids (TSS) predominantly occurred in the pond reach and estuary
reaches with larger width and Iow current velocity. Pollutants retained in
these reaches accounted for more than 50%of those retained in whole stream. The
retention mostly happened in the rain-runoff events and it was 7 to 27 times
than that in base flow. The results showed that the channelized reach was the
most important source for pollutants release under either runoff or base flow,
and its release accounted for more than 90% of whole stream release.There was a
high spatial variability of nutrients retention in different channelized
reaches. The channelized reach directly discharging into the pond did always
retain nutrients and TSS under base flow and runoff conditions, whereas the
other channelized reaches performed differently in different hydrological
conditions. The high spatial and temporal variability of nutrients and TSS in
the stream indicated that anthropogenic disturbance of the agricultural
headwater stream, such as channelization and excavation, would be expected to
decrease the capacity of nutrients retention in the stream.
Keywords: retention, release, nutrients, variability, stream forms