Abstract

Abstract. The hyporheic zone is a hotspot of biogeochemical turnover and nutrient removal in running waters. However, nutrient fluxes through the hyporheic zone are highly variable in time and locally heterogeneous. Resulting from the lack of adequate methodologies to obtain representative long-term measurements, our quantitative knowledge on transport and turnover in this important transition zone is still limited.In groundwater systems passive flux meters, devices which simultaneously detect horizontal water and solute flow through a screen well in the subsurface, are valuable tools for measuring fluxes of target solutes and water through those ecosystems. Their functioning is based on accumulation of target substances on a sorbent and concurrent displacement of a resident tracer which is previously loaded on the sorbent.Here we evaluate the applicability of this methodology for investigating water and nutrient fluxes in hyporheic zones. Based on laboratory experiments we developed hyporheic passive flux meters (HPFMs) with a length of 50 cm which were separated in 5–7 segments allowing for vertical resolution of horizontal nutrient and water transport. The HPFMs were tested in a 7 day field campaign including simultaneous measurements of oxygen and temperature profiles and manual sampling of pore water. The results highlighted the advantages of the novel method: with HPFMs, cumulative values for the average N and P flux during the complete deployment time could be captured. Thereby the two major deficits of existing methods are overcome: first, flux rates are measured within one device instead of being calculated from separate measurements of water flow and pore-water concentrations; second, time-integrated measurements are insensitive to short-term fluctuations and therefore deliver more representable values for overall hyporheic nutrient fluxes at the sampling site than snapshots from grab sampling. A remaining limitation to the HPFM is the potential susceptibility to biofilm growth on the resin, an issue which was not considered in previous passive flux meter applications. Potential techniques to inhibit biofouling are discussed based on the results of the presented work. Finally, we exemplarily demonstrate how HPFM measurements can be used to explore hyporheic nutrient dynamics, specifically nitrate uptake rates, based on the measurements from our field test. Being low in costs and labour effective, many flux meters can be installed in order to capture larger areas of river beds. This novel technique has therefore the potential to deliver quantitative data which are required to answer unsolved questions about transport and turnover of nutrients in hyporheic zones.

Highlights

  • Rivers export high loads of nitrogen from inland catchments to the marine environment (Smith et al, 2006)

  • Based on laboratory experiments we developed hyporheic passive flux meters (HPFMs) with a length of 50 cm which were separated in 5–7 segments allowing for vertical resolution of horizontal nutrient and water transport

  • We intended to deploy the PFM in a way that allows direct contact with the surrounding sediments and minimal manipulation of the natural flow pattern. Considering these requirements, we developed a modification of the PFM for the application in the hyporheic zone

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Summary

Introduction

Rivers export high loads of nitrogen from inland catchments to the marine environment (Smith et al, 2006). In addition to biological nutrient uptake, intermediate physical storage in the hyporheic zone disperses the propagation of pollutant and nutrient spikes which could be harmful for receiving water bodies (Runkel, 2007; Brookshire et al, 2009; Covino et al, 2010; Findlay et al, 2011). For those reasons, it is of interest to quantify the amount of nutrients reaching the reactive sites in the subsurface collateral to the processes they undergo there (Seitzinger et al, 2006; Zarnetske et al, 2012). Due to methodological restrictions, experimental investigations of nutrient dynamics in the hyporheic zone are rare and commonly exclusively of qualitative nature (Mulholland et al, 1997; Grant et al, 2014)

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