TY - JOUR
T1 - Long-Term Shifts in U.S. Nitrogen Sources and Sinks Revealed by the New TREND-Nitrogen Data Set (1930–2017)
AU - Byrnes, D. K.
AU - Van Meter, K. J.
AU - Basu, N. B.
N1 - Publisher Copyright:
© 2020. American Geophysical Union. All Rights Reserved.
PY - 2020/9/1
Y1 - 2020/9/1
N2 - Reactive nitrogen (N) fluxes have increased tenfold over the last century, driven by increases in population, shifting diets, and increased use of commercial N fertilizers. Runoff of excess N from intensively managed landscapes threatens drinking water quality and disrupts aquatic ecosystems. Excess N is also a major source of greenhouse gas emissions from agricultural soils. While N emissions from agricultural landscapes are known to originate from not only current-year N input but also legacy N accumulation in soils and groundwater, there has been limited access to fine-scale, long-term data regarding N inputs and outputs over decades of intensive agricultural land use. In the present work, we synthesize population, agricultural, and atmospheric deposition data to develop a comprehensive, 88-year (1930–2017) data set of county-scale components of the N mass balance across the contiguous United States (Trajectories Nutrient Dataset for nitrogen [TREND-nitrogen]). Using a machine-learning algorithm, we also develop spatially explicit typologies for components of the N mass balance. Our results indicate a large range of N trajectory behaviors across the United States due to differences in land use and management and particularly due to the very different drivers of N dynamics in densely populated urban areas compared with intensively managed agricultural zones. Our analysis of N trajectories also demonstrates a widespread functional homogenization of agricultural landscapes. This newly developed typology of N trajectories improves our understanding of long-term N dynamics, and the underlying data set provides a powerful tool for modeling the impacts of legacy N on past, present, and future water quality.
AB - Reactive nitrogen (N) fluxes have increased tenfold over the last century, driven by increases in population, shifting diets, and increased use of commercial N fertilizers. Runoff of excess N from intensively managed landscapes threatens drinking water quality and disrupts aquatic ecosystems. Excess N is also a major source of greenhouse gas emissions from agricultural soils. While N emissions from agricultural landscapes are known to originate from not only current-year N input but also legacy N accumulation in soils and groundwater, there has been limited access to fine-scale, long-term data regarding N inputs and outputs over decades of intensive agricultural land use. In the present work, we synthesize population, agricultural, and atmospheric deposition data to develop a comprehensive, 88-year (1930–2017) data set of county-scale components of the N mass balance across the contiguous United States (Trajectories Nutrient Dataset for nitrogen [TREND-nitrogen]). Using a machine-learning algorithm, we also develop spatially explicit typologies for components of the N mass balance. Our results indicate a large range of N trajectory behaviors across the United States due to differences in land use and management and particularly due to the very different drivers of N dynamics in densely populated urban areas compared with intensively managed agricultural zones. Our analysis of N trajectories also demonstrates a widespread functional homogenization of agricultural landscapes. This newly developed typology of N trajectories improves our understanding of long-term N dynamics, and the underlying data set provides a powerful tool for modeling the impacts of legacy N on past, present, and future water quality.
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U2 - 10.1029/2020GB006626
DO - 10.1029/2020GB006626
M3 - Article
AN - SCOPUS:85091529846
SN - 0886-6236
VL - 34
JO - Global Biogeochemical Cycles
JF - Global Biogeochemical Cycles
IS - 9
M1 - e2020GB006626
ER -