Publication

Evaluation of the stable isotope signatures of nitrate to detect denitrification in a shallow groundwater system in New Zealand

Citations
Altmetric:
Date
2015-04-01
Type
Journal Article
Abstract
Denitrification in the groundwater systems of agricultural catchments can provide a substantial ‘ecosystem service’ by attenuating leached nitrate (NO₃⁻) before it reaches surface water bodies. Samples along a groundwater flow path with low dissolved oxygen and declining NO₃⁻ concentrations can indicate the occurrence of denitrification. Isotopic analysis of this NO₃⁻ can potentially identify and quantify denitrification activity. In this study, shallow groundwater samples (maximum 5 m below ground surface) were taken from three locations within a small agricultural catchment in the Waikato region of New Zealand. The δ¹⁵N and δ¹⁸O values of NO₃⁻ were analysed to try to determine where denitrification was occurring and at what rate. Results indicated that denitrification rates varied spatially, but interpretation was confounded by insufficiently understood flow paths and extremely low concentrations of NO₃⁻ in reduced groundwater. Seasonal denitrification was observed at a Gley soil site where the soil profile was periodically saturated to near the ground surface and δ¹⁵N-NO₃⁻ values reached +28.5‰ and δ¹⁸O-NO₃⁻ values up to +19.6‰. In contrast to expectations, NO₃⁻ in well-oxidised groundwater samples showed substantial variability in its δ¹⁵N and δ¹⁸O isotopic signature. This indicated that the NO₃⁻ originated from multiple sources, which restricted the quantification of denitrification.
Rights
© 2015 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.
Creative Commons Rights
Access Rights