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Considerations when using nutrient inventories to prioritize water quality improvement efforts across the US

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Ongoing water quality degradation tied to nitrogen and phosphorus pollution results in significant economic damages by diminishing the recreational value of surface water and compromising fisheries. Progress in decreasing nitrogen and phosphorus pollution to surface water over the past two decades has been slow. Limited resources need to be leveraged efficiently and effectively to prioritize watersheds for restoration. Leveraging recent nitrogen and phosphorus inventories for the years 2002, 2007, and 2012, we extracted relevant flux and demand terms to help identify US subbasins that are likely contributing a disproportionate amount of point and non-point source nutrient pollution to surface water by exploring the mean spatial distribution of terrestrial anthropogenic surplus, agricultural surplus, agricultural nutrient use efficiency, and point source loads. A small proportion of the landscape, 50% of point source loads into surface water. Point source loads are mainly concentrated in urban areas across the country with point source loading rates often exceeding >10.0 kg N ha−1 yr−1 and >1.0 kg P ha−1 yr−1 . However, the ability for future upgrades to wastewater treatment plant infrastructure alone is unlikely to drive further improvement in water quality, outside of local water ways, since point source loads only account for ~4% of anthropogenic N and P surplus. As such, further progress in boosting nutrient use efficiency in agricultural production, usually lowest in areas of intensive livestock production, would likely contribute to the biggest gains to water quality restoration goals. This analysis and the corresponding database integrate multiple streams of information to highlight areas where N and P are being managed inefficiently to give decision makers a succinct platform to identify likely areas and sources of water quality degradation.

Impact/Purpose

This work integrates multiple streams of information to provide estimates of fluxes and surpluses across urban and agricultural domains as well as highlight areas where N and P are being managed inefficiently to give decision makers a succinct platform to identify likely areas of water quality degradation. With this quantitative information to prioritize watersheds for restoration, decision makers can then engage with stakeholders to develop meaningful and effectual watershed restoration strategies via regulatory and non-regulatory approaches.

Citation

Sabo, R., C. Clark, AND J. Compton. Considerations when using nutrient inventories to prioritize water quality improvement efforts across the US. IOP Publishing, BRISTOL, UK, 3:045005, (2021). [DOI: 10.1088/2515-7620/abf296]

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DOI: Considerations when using nutrient inventories to prioritize water quality improvement efforts across the US
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Last updated on May 05, 2021
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