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Keeping Up with Phosphorus Dynamics: Overdue Conceptual Changes in Vegetative Filter Strip Research and Management

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Keeping Up with Phosphorus Dynamics: Overdue Conceptual Changes in Vegetative Filter Strip Research and Management. / Ramler, David; Stutter, Marc; Weigelhofer, Gabriele et al.
In: Frontiers in Environmental Science, Vol. 10, 764333, 01.04.2022.

Research output: Contribution to Journal/MagazineJournal articlepeer-review

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APA

Ramler, D., Stutter, M., Weigelhofer, G., Quinton, J. N., Hood-Nowotny, R., & Strauss, P. (2022). Keeping Up with Phosphorus Dynamics: Overdue Conceptual Changes in Vegetative Filter Strip Research and Management. Frontiers in Environmental Science, 10, Article 764333. https://doi.org/10.3389/fenvs.2022.764333

Vancouver

Ramler D, Stutter M, Weigelhofer G, Quinton JN, Hood-Nowotny R, Strauss P. Keeping Up with Phosphorus Dynamics: Overdue Conceptual Changes in Vegetative Filter Strip Research and Management. Frontiers in Environmental Science. 2022 Apr 1;10:764333. doi: 10.3389/fenvs.2022.764333

Author

Ramler, David ; Stutter, Marc ; Weigelhofer, Gabriele et al. / Keeping Up with Phosphorus Dynamics : Overdue Conceptual Changes in Vegetative Filter Strip Research and Management. In: Frontiers in Environmental Science. 2022 ; Vol. 10.

Bibtex

@article{7499122373e04655a949a3c88d9426db,
title = "Keeping Up with Phosphorus Dynamics: Overdue Conceptual Changes in Vegetative Filter Strip Research and Management",
abstract = "Vegetative filter strips (VFS) are best management practices with the primary aim of protecting surface waters from eutrophication resulting from excess nutrient inputs from agricultural sources. However, we argue that there is a substantial time and knowledge lag from the science underpinning VFS to policy and implementation. Focussing on phosphorus (P), we strive to introduce a holistic view on VFS that accounts for the whole functional soil volume, temporal and seasonal effects, the geospatial context, the climatic and physico-chemical basic conditions, and the intricate bio-geochemical processes that govern nutrient retention, transformation, and transport. Specifically, we suggest a step-wise approach to custom VFS designs that links and matches the incoming P from event to multi-annual timescales from the short- and mid-term processes of P retention in the effective soil volume and to the longer-term P retention and offtake coupled to the soil-vegetation system. An a priori assessment of the P export potential should be followed by bespoke VFS designs, in line with local conditions and socio-economic and ecological constraints. To cope with increasingly nutrient saturated or functionally insufficient VFS installed over the last decades, concepts and management strategies need to encompass the transition in understanding of VFS as simple nutrient containers to multifunctional buffer zones that have a complex inner life. We need to address these associated emerging challenges and integrate their implications more thoroughly into VFS research, monitoring, policy, and implementation than ever before. Only then we may get VFS that are effective, sustainable, and persistent.",
keywords = "Environmental Science, riparian buffer strips (RBS), nutrient management, adaptive design, functional soil volume, erosion, runoff, concentrated flow, vegetated filter strips",
author = "David Ramler and Marc Stutter and Gabriele Weigelhofer and Quinton, {John N.} and Rebecca Hood-Nowotny and Peter Strauss",
year = "2022",
month = apr,
day = "1",
doi = "10.3389/fenvs.2022.764333",
language = "English",
volume = "10",
journal = "Frontiers in Environmental Science",
issn = "2296-665X",
publisher = "Frontiers Media S.A.",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - Keeping Up with Phosphorus Dynamics

T2 - Overdue Conceptual Changes in Vegetative Filter Strip Research and Management

AU - Ramler, David

AU - Stutter, Marc

AU - Weigelhofer, Gabriele

AU - Quinton, John N.

AU - Hood-Nowotny, Rebecca

AU - Strauss, Peter

PY - 2022/4/1

Y1 - 2022/4/1

N2 - Vegetative filter strips (VFS) are best management practices with the primary aim of protecting surface waters from eutrophication resulting from excess nutrient inputs from agricultural sources. However, we argue that there is a substantial time and knowledge lag from the science underpinning VFS to policy and implementation. Focussing on phosphorus (P), we strive to introduce a holistic view on VFS that accounts for the whole functional soil volume, temporal and seasonal effects, the geospatial context, the climatic and physico-chemical basic conditions, and the intricate bio-geochemical processes that govern nutrient retention, transformation, and transport. Specifically, we suggest a step-wise approach to custom VFS designs that links and matches the incoming P from event to multi-annual timescales from the short- and mid-term processes of P retention in the effective soil volume and to the longer-term P retention and offtake coupled to the soil-vegetation system. An a priori assessment of the P export potential should be followed by bespoke VFS designs, in line with local conditions and socio-economic and ecological constraints. To cope with increasingly nutrient saturated or functionally insufficient VFS installed over the last decades, concepts and management strategies need to encompass the transition in understanding of VFS as simple nutrient containers to multifunctional buffer zones that have a complex inner life. We need to address these associated emerging challenges and integrate their implications more thoroughly into VFS research, monitoring, policy, and implementation than ever before. Only then we may get VFS that are effective, sustainable, and persistent.

AB - Vegetative filter strips (VFS) are best management practices with the primary aim of protecting surface waters from eutrophication resulting from excess nutrient inputs from agricultural sources. However, we argue that there is a substantial time and knowledge lag from the science underpinning VFS to policy and implementation. Focussing on phosphorus (P), we strive to introduce a holistic view on VFS that accounts for the whole functional soil volume, temporal and seasonal effects, the geospatial context, the climatic and physico-chemical basic conditions, and the intricate bio-geochemical processes that govern nutrient retention, transformation, and transport. Specifically, we suggest a step-wise approach to custom VFS designs that links and matches the incoming P from event to multi-annual timescales from the short- and mid-term processes of P retention in the effective soil volume and to the longer-term P retention and offtake coupled to the soil-vegetation system. An a priori assessment of the P export potential should be followed by bespoke VFS designs, in line with local conditions and socio-economic and ecological constraints. To cope with increasingly nutrient saturated or functionally insufficient VFS installed over the last decades, concepts and management strategies need to encompass the transition in understanding of VFS as simple nutrient containers to multifunctional buffer zones that have a complex inner life. We need to address these associated emerging challenges and integrate their implications more thoroughly into VFS research, monitoring, policy, and implementation than ever before. Only then we may get VFS that are effective, sustainable, and persistent.

KW - Environmental Science

KW - riparian buffer strips (RBS)

KW - nutrient management

KW - adaptive design

KW - functional soil volume

KW - erosion

KW - runoff

KW - concentrated flow

KW - vegetated filter strips

U2 - 10.3389/fenvs.2022.764333

DO - 10.3389/fenvs.2022.764333

M3 - Journal article

VL - 10

JO - Frontiers in Environmental Science

JF - Frontiers in Environmental Science

SN - 2296-665X

M1 - 764333

ER -