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10 March 2015 Influence of mowing and narrow grass buffer widths on reductions in sediment, nutrients, and bacteria in surface runoff
J. J. Miller, T. Curtis, D. S. Chanasyk, S. Reedyk
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Abstract

Miller, J. J., Curtis, T., Chanasyk, D. S. and Reedyk, S. 2015. Influence of mowing and narrow grass buffer widths on reductions in sediment, nutrients, and bacteria in surface runoff. Can. J. Soil Sci. 95: 139-151. Little research has been conducted on the effect of mowing and buffer width on the effectiveness of short-width (< 10 m) native grass buffers to filter sediment, nutrients, and bacteria. A 2-yr (2011-2012) field study was conducted on native rangeland in southern Alberta. The treatments of mowing and buffer width (1.5, 3, 6 m) were evaluated using a randomized complete block design with four replicates. The buffer plots were pre-wet with distilled water. A spiked solution was then applied to each plot using a run-on distribution device and the runoff collected every 10 min for 30 min once the runoff started discharging from the plot. The volume of runoff, and percent reduction in concentration and mass of sediment [total dissolved solids (TSS)], phosphorus [dissolved reactive P (DRP), total P], nitrogen (total N), and bacteria (Escherichia coli, total coliforms) in runoff were determined. The findings did not support our hypothesis that percent reductions in concentrations and mass for sediment, nutrients, and bacteria were greater for mowed than unmowed buffers. In contrast, the findings supported our hypothesis that increasing buffer width would significantly (P≤0.05) decrease mass (but not concentration) of sediment, nutrients, and bacteria in runoff. The significant mass reduction was attributed to a reduced runoff ratio caused by longer residence time and greater infiltration in the wider buffers. Mass reductions for the three buffer widths ranged from 29 to 92% for TSS, 22 to 93% for DRP, 38 to 93% for total P, 23 to 92% for total N, and between 61 and 94% for E. coli and total coliforms. These findings suggest that buffer width but not mowing may reduce runoff quantity and improve runoff quality over the short term.

J. J. Miller, T. Curtis, D. S. Chanasyk, and S. Reedyk "Influence of mowing and narrow grass buffer widths on reductions in sediment, nutrients, and bacteria in surface runoff," Canadian Journal of Soil Science 95(2), 139-151, (10 March 2015). https://doi.org/10.1139/CJSS-2014-082
Received: 26 August 2014; Accepted: 1 February 2015; Published: 10 March 2015
JOURNAL ARTICLE
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KEYWORDS
bacteria
bactéries
filtering
filtrage
Grass buffers
nutrients
oligoéléments
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