Nitrogen loads through baseflow, stormflow, and underflow to Rehoboth Bay, Delaware.

J Environ Qual

Watershed Assessment Section, Delaware Department of Natural Resources and Environmental Control, 820 Silver Lake Boulevard, Suite 220, Dover, DE 19904, USA.

Published: December 2006

A detailed study of water and nitrogen (N) discharge from a small, representative subwatershed of Rehoboth Bay, Delaware, was conducted to determine total N loads to the bay. The concentrations of ammonium (NH4(+)), nitrate + nitrite (NO3(-) + NO2(-)), and dissolved and particulate organic N were determined in baseflow and storm waters discharging from Bundicks Branch from October 1998 to April 2002. A novel hydrographic separation model that accounts for significant decreases in baseflow during storm events was developed to estimate N loads during unsampled storms. Nitrogen loads based on gauged flows alone (7100-19,100 kg/yr) significantly underestimated those based on land use-land cover (LULC) and estimated N export factors from different classes of LULC (32,000-40,600 kg/yr). However, when ungauged underflow and associated N loads were included in the total loads (25,500-33,800 kg/yr), there was much better agreement with LULC export models. This suggests that in permeable coastal plain sediments, underflow contributes significantly to N fluxes to estuarine receiving waters, particularly in drier years. Based on the similarity in LULC, N loads from the Bundicks Branch subwatershed were used to estimate upland loads to the entire Rehoboth Bay Watershed (259,000-316,000 kg/yr). These N loads from the watershed were much greater than those from direct atmospheric deposition (49,000-64,500 kg/yr) and from a local wastewater treatment plant (9700-13,700 kg/yr). While the watershed was the principal source of N at all times during the year, the relative contributions from the watershed, wastewater, and direct atmospheric deposition varied predictably with season.

Download full-text PDF

Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.2134/jeq2005.0373DOI Listing

Publication Analysis

Top Keywords

rehoboth bay
12
nitrogen loads
8
bay delaware
8
loads
8
total loads
8
baseflow storm
8
bundicks branch
8
direct atmospheric
8
atmospheric deposition
8
kg/yr
6

Similar Publications

Sea level rise (SLR) promotes saltwater intrusion (SWI) into coastal soils globally at an increasing rate, impacting phosphorus (P) dynamics and adjacent water quality. However, how SWI influences P molecular speciation and availability in coastal soils remains poorly understood. By using a space-for-time substitution strategy, we evaluated the SWI impacts on P transformation along a SWI gradient at the Rehoboth Inland Bay, which consists of five sampling locations along a transect representing different SWI degrees.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

spp. and phytoplankton are naturally abundant in marine environments. Recent studies have suggested that the co-occurrence of phytoplankton and the pathogenic bacterium Vibrio parahaemolyticus is due to shared ecological factors, such as nutrient requirements.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Microbial Source Tracking in the Love Creek Watershed, Delaware (USA).

Dela J Public Health

January 2021

Laboratory Director, Public Health and Environmental Laboratories, State of Delaware.

Fecal contamination of waterways in Delaware pose an ongoing problem for environmental and public health. For monitoring efforts, has been widely adopted by the state to indicate the presence of fecal matter from warm-blooded animals and to establish Primary and Secondary Contact Recreation criteria. In this study, we examined sites within the Love Creek watershed, a tributary of the Rehoboth bay, using next-generation sequencing and SourceTracker to determine sources of potential fecal contamination and compared to bacterial communities to chemical and nutrient concentrations.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

The gastropod Ilyanassa obsoleta as a resource: utilization by larval trematodes in a low-prevalence system.

J Parasitol

August 2009

Cape Henlopen Laboratory, College of Marine and Earth Studies, University of Delaware, Lewes, Delaware 19958, USA.

The snail Ilyanassa obsoleta is native in estuaries along the eastern seaboard of North America. In Delaware, most studies on this snail and its larval trematode parasites have been done in snail populations where prevalence (percent infected) is high. Here, data were obtained from a lower-prevalence population in southeastern Rehoboth Bay, Delaware to study how the resident trematodes exploit the snail resource among the salt marsh islands.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Nitrogen loads through baseflow, stormflow, and underflow to Rehoboth Bay, Delaware.

J Environ Qual

December 2006

Watershed Assessment Section, Delaware Department of Natural Resources and Environmental Control, 820 Silver Lake Boulevard, Suite 220, Dover, DE 19904, USA.

A detailed study of water and nitrogen (N) discharge from a small, representative subwatershed of Rehoboth Bay, Delaware, was conducted to determine total N loads to the bay. The concentrations of ammonium (NH4(+)), nitrate + nitrite (NO3(-) + NO2(-)), and dissolved and particulate organic N were determined in baseflow and storm waters discharging from Bundicks Branch from October 1998 to April 2002. A novel hydrographic separation model that accounts for significant decreases in baseflow during storm events was developed to estimate N loads during unsampled storms.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Want AI Summaries of new PubMed Abstracts delivered to your In-box?

Enter search terms and have AI summaries delivered each week - change queries or unsubscribe any time!