The relationship of precipitation intensity, cover crops, and P management on hydrograph characteristics and water quality
Date
Authors
Journal Title
Journal ISSN
Volume Title
Publisher
Abstract
An increased frequency of intense precipitation events will impact flood potential, soil
erosion, and nutrient loss from agricultural lands. Current management practices include the
application of cover crops to reduce sediment loss and increase infiltration, thereby reducing
surface runoff. However, the effects of cover crops and phosphorous (P) fertilizer management
on water quality and runoff characteristics need to be examined to understand how these
practices will perform in an environment with more frequent intense precipitation events. The
objective of this study was to analyze the change in water quality and surface runoff under a
range of naturally occurring precipitation intensities with the application of cover crops and P
fertilizer.
Runoff and water quality data were collected from the Kansas Agricultural Watershed
(KAW) field laboratory in Ashland Bottoms, KS from 2015-2022 from a corn-soybean cropping
rotation with edge-of-field runoff monitoring. The KAW field lab had 18 0.5-ha plots arranged in
a 2x3 factorial randomized complete block design with two levels of cover (winter annual cover
crops and no cover) and three levels of P fertilizer application replicated 3 times. This study used
data from only two levels of P fertilization, control (CN) and spring injected P fertilizer (SI),
both without cover crop (NC) and with cover crop (CC). For the SI treatments, ammonium
polyphosphate (10-34-0) was subsurface applied at spring planting at a rate of 61 kg P2O5 ha-1
from 2015 to 2019 with a slight decrease in rate to 55 kg kg P2O5 ha-1 from 2020 to 2022. The
CN plots did not receive P fertilizer. Real-time precipitation events were monitored for runoff
and samples were collected and analyzed for total suspended sediment, total P, and dissolved
reactive P concentrations. Mass losses of runoff, total suspended sediment, total P, and dissolved
reactive P were normalized based on precipitation depth to isolate the effects of precipitation
intensity. Depth measurements taken inside the flume during the runoff event were paired with
precipitation data to identify the point of runoff initiation, peak flow, and runoff termination. A
multiple regression analysis was completed using SAS proc glimmix (version 9.4; Cary, NC) to
test if treatment effects on response variables would change under increasing precipitation
intensities.
The runoff ratio increased with increasing precipitation intensity for the SI-CC and the
CN-NC treatments, with the greatest effect on the CN-NC treatment. Total suspended sediment
load and total P load per unit of precipitation both increased with increasing precipitation
intensity, with the greatest increase also occurring in the CN-NC treatment. Precipitation
intensity had no effect on dissolved reactive P loss per unit of precipitation (DRPp) for the
treatments receiving P fertilizer, whereas DRPp increased with increasing precipitation intensity
for treatments not receiving P fertilizer. The time to runoff initiation and time to peak flow
uniformly decreased with increasing precipitation intensity for all treatments. While not always
significant, times to initiation and peak flow were longest in the SI-CC treatment. The time of
concentration decreased for all treatments with increasing precipitation intensity. Cover crops
significantly increased the time of concentration in the CN plots and significantly decreased the
time of concentration in the SI plots. Peak flow increased with increasing precipitation intensity
for all treatments. Cover crops and P fertilizer decreased the peak flow when compared to the
CN-NC treatment with the SI-CC treatment having the smallest peak flow.
Cover crops alone were shown to reduce sediment loss, total P loss, peak flow and the
runoff ratio under intense precipitation. For most of these variables the addition of P fertilizer
further reduces the losses except for total P loss. Under the most intense storms in this dataset
plots treated with P fertilizer showed no difference in total P loss than the CN-NC treatment
which was the treatment most sensitive to precipitation intensities. Dissolved reactive P was also
the greatest with P fertilizer application at all intensities. Implementing these conservation
management decisions should be weighed against what losses would most likely occur on the
land and what local climate modeling predicts for the area. An increase in precipitation intensity
is likely to occur with climate change, these management practices have shown to continue to
work as a conservation effort.