Abstract

Fertilizer applications and other non-point sources result in an increasing diffuse N and P pollution of receiving waters degrading water quality by eutrophication with several adverse impacts. Floodplains are regarded as reactive interfaces between uplands and receiving waters. In the present study groundwater quality on its subsurface flow from an upland area through a lowland floodplain towards the receiving water body of the Spree River was monitored biweekly over 2 years with two transects of 18 groundwater observation wells. Within the floodplain reaction rates of the nutrients are unevenly distributed. On a scale smaller than the floodplain, the hyporheic zone is regarded as reactive interface with unproportional high reaction rates. Therefore, phosphate and dissolved iron were measured with high spatial resolution in the pore water of the riverbed and the oxbow bed to investigate turnover processes and their small-scale spatial variability at the immediate surface–subsurface interface. The biogeochemical composition of subsurface water is characterized by little temporal variability while spatial heterogeneity is high on the hectametre scale of the study site as well as on the centimetre scale of the bed sediments. Nitrate is eliminated very efficiently by denitrification in the anoxic aquifer of the floodplain while ammonium and phosphate concentrations increase under anoxic conditions. Phosphate and ammonium originate from the mineralization of organic matter and phosphate is additionally released by reductive dissolution of iron-bound phosphorus and weathering of bedrock. Sorption–desorption processes equalize temporal fluctuations of phosphate concentrations. Phosphate uptake by plants is assumed as an important process at only one of the groundwater observation wells. Redox conditions required for a phosphate sink are opposite to those involved in nitrate removal by denitrification. Thus, redox patchiness of floodplain aquifers favours nitrate and phosphate removal, i.e. a temporal and spatial sequence of anoxic and oxic conditions eliminates nitrogen and causes phosphate storage. On the groundwater's path from the upland to the river further phosphate is released in the bed sediments. It originates from previously settled particulate compounds containing phosphorus. While the release of iron-bound phosphorus clearly predominates in the riverbed sediments the mineralization of organic matter is an important additional phosphorus release process in the oxbow bed sediments.

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