Bioeconomy Science Institute, AgResearch Group
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Sources, fate and influencing factors of nitrate in farmland drainage ditches of the irrigation area

journal contribution
posted on 2025-08-31, 22:46 authored by Tianpeng Zhang, Qiyu Xu, Xiaotong Liu, Qiuliang LeiQiuliang Lei, Jiafa LuoJiafa Luo, MiaoYing An, Xinzhong Du, Weiwen Qiu, Xuejun Zhang, Fengzhi Wang, Hongbin Liu
<p dir="ltr">Global irrigation areas face the contradictory challenges of controlling nitrate inputs and ensuring food-safe production. To prevent and control nitrate pollution in irrigation areas, the study using the Yellow River basin (Ningxia section) of China as a case study, employed nitrogen and oxygen dual isotope tracing and extensive field investigations to analyze the sources, fate, and influencing factors of nitrate in agricultural drainage ditches. The results of source tracing of nitrate showed that annual proportions of nitrate sources entering the Yellow River in the ditches are as follows: for manure & sewage, fertilizer, and natural sources, the ratios are 33%, 35%, and 32% overall. The results of nitrate fate showed that nitrates derived from nitrate fertilizer exhibit a lower residual rate in drainage ditches (ecological ditches) compared to ammonium fertilizer, which can undergo self-ecological restoration within one year. The results of influencing factors showed that crops with high water and nutrient requirements, such as vegetables, the nitrate pollution and environmental harm resulting from “exploitative cultivation” are five times more than normal cultivation practices in dryland and paddy fields, especially winter irrigation without crop interception exacerbates the leaching of nitrate from the soil. Therefore, nitrate management in irrigation areas should focus on preventing and controlling “exploitative cultivation” and losses during winter irrigation, while appropriately adjusting the application ratio of ammonium nitrogen fertilizers. The results of the study can guide strategies to mitigate nitrate pollution in irrigated areas such as livestock farming, fertilizer application, irrigation management, ditch optimization, and crop cultivation.</p>

History

Rights statement

© 2024 Elsevier Ltd. All rights are reserved, including those for text and data mining, AI training, and similar technologies

Publication date

2024-08-07

Project number

  • Non revenue

Language

  • English

Does this contain Māori information or data?

  • No

Publisher

Elsevier

Journal title

Journal of Environmental Management

ISSN

0301-4797

Volume/issue number

367

Page numbers

122113

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