Abstract

Seasonal water-table fluctuations in wetlands can result in flooded and drained conditions in the surface soil. In constructed wetlands water level drawdown and soil drainage are used in management to consolidate detrital materials, accelerate soil build up, and provide easy access for other management operations. A greenhouse study was conducted using intact peat soil cores to evaluate the changes in bioavailable P and other fractions following draining and reflooding. Measurements of floodwater dissolved reactive P (DRP) indicated that draining and soil exposure could result in large P flux to the overlying water column. Phosphorus flux in soils drained for 6 weeks was 10-fold higher (334 mg P m −2 day −1) than in soils drained for 3 weeks (33 mg P m −2 day −1). Soil exposure also resulted in an increase in bioavailable inorganic P (estimated by KCl extraction) at the expense of labile organic P pool. The KCl-P pool, which was initially less than 2% of total P (TP), increased to 3% and 13% of TP after 3 and 6 weeks draining, respectively. Results suggest that various soil P fractions, particularly those in newly accreted materials, were highly unstable and could be released in a more available form when newly accreted soils undergo drying. Water level drawdown and reflooding could result in significant P release, a possible stimulation of algal blooms and other water quality problems. Therefore, soil characteristics and chemistry and their impact on water quality should be a major consideration when one adopts the flood-drain technique in wetland management.

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