Abstract

The main trend in land-use changes in the Porijõgi River catchment, south Estonia, is a significant increase in abandoned lands (from 1.7% in 1987 to 10.5% in 1997), and a decrease in arable lands (from 41.8 to 23.9%). Significant climatic fluctuations occurred during the last decades. Milder winters (increase of air temperature in February from −7.9 to −5.5°C during the period 1950–1997) and a change in the precipitation pattern have influenced the mean annual water discharge. This results in more intensive material flow during colder seasons and decreased water runoff in summer. During the period 1987–1997 the runoff of total-N, total-P, SO 4, and organic material (after BOD 5) decreased from 25.9 to 5.1, from 0.32 to 0.13, from 78 to 48, and from 7.4 to 3.5 kg ha −1 year −1, respectively. Most significant was a 4–20-fold decrease in agricultural subcatchments while in the forested upper-course catchment the changes were insignificant. Variations of total-N, and total-P runoff in both the entire catchment and its agricultural subcatchments are well described by the change of land use (including fertilization intensity), soil parameters and water discharge. In small agricultural subcatchments the rate of fertilization was found to be the most important factor affecting nitrogen runoff, while land-use pattern plays the main role in larger mosaic catchments. Ecotechnological measures (e.g. riparian buffer zones and buffer strips, constructed wetlands) to control nutrient flows from agricultural catchments are very important.

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