Home > Research > Publications & Outputs > Long term simulations of macronutrients (C, N a...

Links

Text available via DOI:

View graph of relations

Long term simulations of macronutrients (C, N and P) in UK freshwaters

Research output: Contribution to Journal/MagazineJournal articlepeer-review

Published

Standard

Long term simulations of macronutrients (C, N and P) in UK freshwaters. / Bell, V.A.; Naden, P.S.; Tipping, E. et al.
In: Science of the Total Environment, Vol. 776, 145813, 01.07.2021.

Research output: Contribution to Journal/MagazineJournal articlepeer-review

Harvard

Bell, VA, Naden, PS, Tipping, E, Davies, HN, Carnell, E, Davies, JAC, Dore, AJ, Dragosits, U, Lapworth, DJ, Muhammed, SE, Quinton, JN, Stuart, M, Tomlinson, S, Wang, L, Whitmore, AP & Wu, L 2021, 'Long term simulations of macronutrients (C, N and P) in UK freshwaters', Science of the Total Environment, vol. 776, 145813. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.scitotenv.2021.145813

APA

Bell, V. A., Naden, P. S., Tipping, E., Davies, H. N., Carnell, E., Davies, J. A. C., Dore, A. J., Dragosits, U., Lapworth, D. J., Muhammed, S. E., Quinton, J. N., Stuart, M., Tomlinson, S., Wang, L., Whitmore, A. P., & Wu, L. (2021). Long term simulations of macronutrients (C, N and P) in UK freshwaters. Science of the Total Environment, 776, Article 145813. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.scitotenv.2021.145813

Vancouver

Bell VA, Naden PS, Tipping E, Davies HN, Carnell E, Davies JAC et al. Long term simulations of macronutrients (C, N and P) in UK freshwaters. Science of the Total Environment. 2021 Jul 1;776:145813. Epub 2021 Feb 19. doi: 10.1016/j.scitotenv.2021.145813

Author

Bell, V.A. ; Naden, P.S. ; Tipping, E. et al. / Long term simulations of macronutrients (C, N and P) in UK freshwaters. In: Science of the Total Environment. 2021 ; Vol. 776.

Bibtex

@article{2b360291e59041459793b14afe215a5e,
title = "Long term simulations of macronutrients (C, N and P) in UK freshwaters",
abstract = "Over the last two centuries, the landscape of many industrialised nations has been transformed by the spread and intensification of agriculture, by atmospheric pollution, by human waste (rising in line with population growth), and now by changes in the climate. The research presented here aims to understand and quantify how these long-term changes have impacted UK freshwaters and the flux of macronutrients to the sea. The Long Term Large Scale (LTLS) Freshwater Model presented here used readily-available driving data (climate, land-use, nutrient inputs, catchment topography) to understand and quantify how changes in the UK's macronutrient histories have impacted on freshwater stores and fluxes. Model-reconstructed sources and fluxes of carbon, nitrogen and phosphorus (C, N and P) from 1800 to 2010 indicate that the rapid increase in the use of agricultural fertilisers after the second world war, and the rising human population, led to a rapid rise in N & P fluxes to rivers. During this period, the modelling shows that the dominant source of N in rivers changed from improved grassland to arable, the dissolved N export to rivers quadrupled, and P from human waste increased by ~600%, despite waste water treatment. The simulations also indicate a net storage of nitrates in groundwater between the 1940s and 1990s, and a net release to coastal waters post-1990; but groundwater retention and later release of C&P are less significant. Overall, modelling indicates that >75% of C, N and P entering freshwaters goes directly to the coastal waters, with 15–20% of C & N removed in river processes. These results constitute the first process-based integrated modelling assessment of freshwater macronutrient change at a national scale. The LTLS approach provides a methodology to develop fully-coupled global models of terrestrial, freshwater, atmospheric and marine processes that can take account of changes in land-management and climate.  ",
keywords = "Hydrological modelling, Macronutrients, Water quality",
author = "V.A. Bell and P.S. Naden and E. Tipping and H.N. Davies and E. Carnell and J.A.C. Davies and A.J. Dore and U. Dragosits and D.J. Lapworth and S.E. Muhammed and J.N. Quinton and M. Stuart and S. Tomlinson and L. Wang and A.P. Whitmore and L. Wu",
year = "2021",
month = jul,
day = "1",
doi = "10.1016/j.scitotenv.2021.145813",
language = "English",
volume = "776",
journal = "Science of the Total Environment",
issn = "0048-9697",
publisher = "Elsevier Science B.V.",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - Long term simulations of macronutrients (C, N and P) in UK freshwaters

AU - Bell, V.A.

AU - Naden, P.S.

AU - Tipping, E.

AU - Davies, H.N.

AU - Carnell, E.

AU - Davies, J.A.C.

AU - Dore, A.J.

AU - Dragosits, U.

AU - Lapworth, D.J.

AU - Muhammed, S.E.

AU - Quinton, J.N.

AU - Stuart, M.

AU - Tomlinson, S.

AU - Wang, L.

AU - Whitmore, A.P.

AU - Wu, L.

PY - 2021/7/1

Y1 - 2021/7/1

N2 - Over the last two centuries, the landscape of many industrialised nations has been transformed by the spread and intensification of agriculture, by atmospheric pollution, by human waste (rising in line with population growth), and now by changes in the climate. The research presented here aims to understand and quantify how these long-term changes have impacted UK freshwaters and the flux of macronutrients to the sea. The Long Term Large Scale (LTLS) Freshwater Model presented here used readily-available driving data (climate, land-use, nutrient inputs, catchment topography) to understand and quantify how changes in the UK's macronutrient histories have impacted on freshwater stores and fluxes. Model-reconstructed sources and fluxes of carbon, nitrogen and phosphorus (C, N and P) from 1800 to 2010 indicate that the rapid increase in the use of agricultural fertilisers after the second world war, and the rising human population, led to a rapid rise in N & P fluxes to rivers. During this period, the modelling shows that the dominant source of N in rivers changed from improved grassland to arable, the dissolved N export to rivers quadrupled, and P from human waste increased by ~600%, despite waste water treatment. The simulations also indicate a net storage of nitrates in groundwater between the 1940s and 1990s, and a net release to coastal waters post-1990; but groundwater retention and later release of C&P are less significant. Overall, modelling indicates that >75% of C, N and P entering freshwaters goes directly to the coastal waters, with 15–20% of C & N removed in river processes. These results constitute the first process-based integrated modelling assessment of freshwater macronutrient change at a national scale. The LTLS approach provides a methodology to develop fully-coupled global models of terrestrial, freshwater, atmospheric and marine processes that can take account of changes in land-management and climate.  

AB - Over the last two centuries, the landscape of many industrialised nations has been transformed by the spread and intensification of agriculture, by atmospheric pollution, by human waste (rising in line with population growth), and now by changes in the climate. The research presented here aims to understand and quantify how these long-term changes have impacted UK freshwaters and the flux of macronutrients to the sea. The Long Term Large Scale (LTLS) Freshwater Model presented here used readily-available driving data (climate, land-use, nutrient inputs, catchment topography) to understand and quantify how changes in the UK's macronutrient histories have impacted on freshwater stores and fluxes. Model-reconstructed sources and fluxes of carbon, nitrogen and phosphorus (C, N and P) from 1800 to 2010 indicate that the rapid increase in the use of agricultural fertilisers after the second world war, and the rising human population, led to a rapid rise in N & P fluxes to rivers. During this period, the modelling shows that the dominant source of N in rivers changed from improved grassland to arable, the dissolved N export to rivers quadrupled, and P from human waste increased by ~600%, despite waste water treatment. The simulations also indicate a net storage of nitrates in groundwater between the 1940s and 1990s, and a net release to coastal waters post-1990; but groundwater retention and later release of C&P are less significant. Overall, modelling indicates that >75% of C, N and P entering freshwaters goes directly to the coastal waters, with 15–20% of C & N removed in river processes. These results constitute the first process-based integrated modelling assessment of freshwater macronutrient change at a national scale. The LTLS approach provides a methodology to develop fully-coupled global models of terrestrial, freshwater, atmospheric and marine processes that can take account of changes in land-management and climate.  

KW - Hydrological modelling

KW - Macronutrients

KW - Water quality

U2 - 10.1016/j.scitotenv.2021.145813

DO - 10.1016/j.scitotenv.2021.145813

M3 - Journal article

VL - 776

JO - Science of the Total Environment

JF - Science of the Total Environment

SN - 0048-9697

M1 - 145813

ER -