Abstract

In Ireland, Food Harvest 2020 focuses on increasing productivity while enhancing environmental sustainability of agricultural land. On underutilised or marginal land, drainage systems may be installed to expand agricultural enterprises. Mixed nutrient losses are inevitable from any drainage system, but assessing processes leading to differences in nutrient speciation, fractionation and losses in grasslands between locations or flow paths is important to achieve sustainability. This study investigates these processes in overland flow and subsurface drains over three rainfall events from four non-grazed plots recently converted from marginal land in the south-east of Ireland. A shallower water table and smaller plot size resulted in greater water and nutrient losses in overland flow per unit of land area. Nutrient losses were less in subsurface drains. Dissolved organic nitrogen (DON) dominated, but dissolved inorganic nitrogen (DIN) was more abundant in the drains. Particulate phosphorus generally dominated in drains, except in plots with a shallow water table where dissolved unreactive phosphorus (DUP) was more abundant. In overland flow, a shallower water table resulted in a switch from dissolved reactive phosphorus (DRP) to DUP. Fertilisation increased phosphorus losses in overland flow, with DRP dominating. These results highlight the importance of an integrated assessment of the controls on flow and nutrient losses to design drainage systems in marginal lands.

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