Abstract
Identifying the key processes and primary sources of water and nutrient losses is essential for water quantity and quality management in watersheds. This is especially true in the U.S. Corn Belt, which has been recognized as the primary region contributing nutrient loads to the Great Lakes and the Gulf of Mexico. A SWAT (Soil and Water Assessment Tool) model simulation was set up in an agricultural watershed with about 50% tile drainage area in the U.S. Corn Belt to study the water and nutrient balance components for the whole watershed and the corn-soybean rotation system. The SWAT model was improved to consider additional nitrogen and phosphorus loss paths from the soil. The model was comprehensively calibrated and validated for simulating monthly stream flow, total suspended solids (TSS), nutrient loads (including total Kjeldahl nitrogen (TKN), nitrate and nitrite nitrogen (NOx-N), total phosphorus (TP) and orthophosphate phosphorus (orthoP)), actual evapotranspiration (ETa), leaf area index (LAI) and annual crop yields in the watershed from 2011 to 2019. Results showed the model performance was very good for simulating the stream flow, TSS and ETa, and acceptable for nutrient loads, LAI and crop yields. ETa, surface runoff, lateral soil flow, tile drainage and percolation respectively accounted for 65%, 15%, 2%, 8% and 9% of the precipitation. Fertilizer was the main source of nitrogen and phosphorus input to the watershed, and harvested crops were the main paths removing nutrients. Surface runoff, tile drainage and percolation each contributed about 30% of total nitrogen losses to water, with surface runoff being dominated by organic nitrogen while tile drainage and percolation were dominated by nitrate nitrogen. Phosphorus losses were mainly through surface runoff, which resulted in 66% of the total losses and was dominated by organic phosphorus and soluble phosphorus. Representing about 49% of the watershed area, the corn-soybean rotation system contributed 83% and 88% of the total nitrogen and phosphorus inputs, respectively, to the watershed, as well as 64% and 46% of the nitrogen and phosphorus losses to the water system, respectively. The non-growing season (October to the next April) was identified as the critical period resulting in water and nutrient losses due to low evapotranspiration and plant uptake. Targeted management strategies for reducing nutrient loads in key hydrological paths were suggested.
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