Abstract
Abstract. We developed a process model LM3-TAN to assess the combined effects of direct human influences and climate change on terrestrial and aquatic nitrogen (TAN) cycling. The model was developed by expanding NOAA's Geophysical Fluid Dynamics Laboratory land model LM3V-N of coupled terrestrial carbon and nitrogen (C-N) cycling and including new N cycling processes and inputs such as a soil denitrification, point N sources to streams (i.e., sewage), and stream transport and microbial processes. Because the model integrates ecological, hydrological, and biogeochemical processes, it captures key controls of the transport and fate of N in the vegetation–soil–river system in a comprehensive and consistent framework which is responsive to climatic variations and land-use changes. We applied the model at 1/8° resolution for a study of the Susquehanna River Basin. We simulated with LM3-TAN stream dissolved organic-N, ammonium-N, and nitrate-N loads throughout the river network, and we evaluated the modeled loads for 1986–2005 using data from 16 monitoring stations as well as a reported budget for the entire basin. By accounting for interannual hydrologic variability, the model was able to capture interannual variations of stream N loadings. While the model was calibrated with the stream N loads only at the last downstream Susquehanna River Basin Commission station Marietta (40°02' N, 76°32' W), it captured the N loads well at multiple locations within the basin with different climate regimes, land-use types, and associated N sources and transformations in the sub-basins. Furthermore, the calculated and previously reported N budgets agreed well at the level of the whole Susquehanna watershed. Here we illustrate how point and non-point N sources contributing to the various ecosystems are stored, lost, and exported via the river. Local analysis of six sub-basins showed combined effects of land use and climate on soil denitrification rates, with the highest rates in the Lower Susquehanna Sub-Basin (extensive agriculture; Atlantic coastal climate) and the lowest rates in the West Branch Susquehanna Sub-Basin (mostly forest; Great Lakes and Midwest climate). In the re-growing secondary forests, most of the N from non-point sources was stored in the vegetation and soil, but in the agricultural lands most N inputs were removed by soil denitrification, indicating that anthropogenic N applications could drive substantial increase of N2O emission, an intermediate of the denitrification process.
Highlights
Available nitrogen (N) in terrestrial ecosystems has significantly increased via anthropogenic nutrient inputs: artificial fertilizer, cultivation of N-fixing crops, and fossil fuel consumption (Galloway et al, 2004, 2008)
Given the current lack of models that link terrestrial carbon and nitrogen (C-N) cycling, long-term vegetation, and land-use dynamics to N loads and concentrations in streams, accounting for different N species, the goal of this research was to build a model to simulate stream N loads that is based on a global-scale terrestrial and N-enabled land model, followed by its testing on a large and complex watershed, for which many years of stream discharge and stream N data are available
Results of our study show that LM3-terrestrial and aquatic nitrogen (TAN) captures well the key mechanisms that control N dynamics in the climate– plant–soil–river system
Summary
Available nitrogen (N) in terrestrial ecosystems has significantly increased via anthropogenic nutrient inputs: artificial fertilizer, cultivation of N-fixing crops, and fossil fuel consumption (Galloway et al, 2004, 2008). This increase has caused acidification and N saturation in some terrestrial and aquatic ecosystems (Henriksen and Brakke, 1988; Kelly et al, 1990; Murdoch and Stoddard, 1992; Howarth, 2002). Quantification and management of the diverse and coupled effects of human activity and climate change on N cycling requires a comprehensive model of the relevant coupled processes that can support the design of optimal nutrient loading controls to maintain desirable water quality and terrestrial ecosystem integrity
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