Abstract

AbstractElevated nutrient inputs challenge the health and functioning of aquatic ecosystems. To improve riverine water quality management, it is necessary to understand the underlying biogeochemical and physical processes, anthropogenic drivers and their interactions at catchment scale. We hypothesize that the spatial heterogeneity of nutrient sources dominantly controls the variability of in‐stream concentration dynamics among catchments. We investigated controls of mean nitrate (NO3−), phosphate (PO43−), and total organic carbon (TOC) concentrations and concentration‐discharge (C‐Q) relationships in 787 German catchments of a newly assembled data base, covering a wide range of physiographic and anthropogenic settings. We linked water quality metrics to catchment characteristics using partial least squares regressions and random forests. We found archetypal C‐Q patterns with enrichment dominating NO3− and TOC, and dilution dominating PO43− export. Both the mean NO3− concentrations and their variance among sites increased with agricultural land use. We argue that subsurface denitrification can buffer high nitrogen inputs and cause a decline in concentration with depth, resulting in chemodynamic, strongly positive C‐Q patterns. Mean PO43− concentrations were related to point sources, though the low predictive power suggests effects of unaccounted in‐stream processes. In contrast, high diffuse agricultural inputs explained observed positive PO43− C‐Q patterns. TOC levels were positively linked to the abundance of riparian wetlands, while hydrological descriptors were important for explaining TOC dynamics. Our study shows a strong modulation of anthropogenic inputs by natural controls for NO3− and PO43− concentrations and dynamics, while for TOC only natural controls dominate observed patterns across Germany.

Highlights

  • Elevated nutrient inputs from human sources such as fertilizers and wastewater put aquatic ecosystems under pressure

  • Our study shows a strong modulation of anthropogenic inputs by natural controls for NO3− and PO43− concentrations and dynamics, while for total organic carbon (TOC) only natural controls dominate observed patterns across Germany

  • C-Q metrics covered all types of patterns and regimes, with mean slope b > 0 and mean CVC/CVQ < 0.5 for NO3-N and TOC and mean slopes b < 0 and mean CVC/CVQ > 0.5 for PO4-P, while standard deviations of b were larger than absolute mean b for all nutrients

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Summary

Introduction

Elevated nutrient inputs from human sources such as fertilizers and wastewater put aquatic ecosystems under pressure. The regulations in Europe and the USA focused on reducing nutrient inputs related to point sources (BGBI.1, 1980; Copeland, 2016; EEC, 1991a), but later addressed nonpoint-source pollution (Copeland, 2016; EEC, 1991b, 2000). Many surface water bodies worldwide lack a good ecological status, with diffuse agricultural sources being one of the main pressures (Damania et al, 2019; EEA, 2018; EPA, 2017). Even though regulations do not focus on regulating the macronutrient organic carbon (Stanley et al, 2012), it affects aquatic ecosystem structure and functioning (for example via energy input and biogeochemical interactions) and can impair drinking water resources (Solomon et al, 2015)

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