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ABSTRACT
Phosphorus losses from natural systems are the background levels against which losses from managed systems should be measured. In Minnesota many recreational lakes are surrounded by deciduous and mixed deciduous-coniferous forests. The P losses from the forests contribute to the natural nutrient levels of the lakes. Phosphorus losses in leaching water are small. Thus, a logical mechanism for the loss of P from forests is surface runoff (overland flow). This research was conducted to study surface runoff amounts and P content.
On a 16% slope, 0.09 kg ha–1 year–1 P of which 0.03 kg was bound to sediment and 0.06 kg was soluble was measured in surface runoff. The major period of runoff was during spring snowmelt when the soil was frozen. The source of P is the litter layer which undergoes freezing and thawing in fall and early winter.
Key Words: sediment P eutrophication nutrient cycles
1 Contribution from the Soil Science Department, University of Minnesota, St. Paul, Minn. 55108. Paper No. 8798.
2 Assistant Professor, University of California, Davis, and Professor of Soil Science, University of Minnesota, St. Paul. This work was completed as partial fulfillment of the Ph.D. degree while the senior author was at the University of Minnesota.
Received for publication August 26, 1974.
This article has been cited by other articles:
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R. A. Marston Particulate and dissolved losses of nitrogen and phosphorus from forest and agricultural soils Progress in Physical Geography, June 1, 1989; 13(2): 234 - 259. [PDF] |
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