USGS Fact Sheet 135-00
December 2000
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Nitrogen in the Mississippi Basin-Estimating Sources and Predicting Flux to the Gulf of
Mexico
by Donald A. Goolsby and William A. Battaglin
Table of Contents
Nitrogen from the Mississippi River Basin (fig. 1) has been implicated as one of the
principal causes for the expanding hypoxic zone that develops each spring and summer on the
Louisiana-Texas shelf of the Gulf of Mexico. Hypoxia refers to dissolved oxygen concentrations
less than 2 mg/L (milligrams per liter). Hypoxia can cause stress or death in bottom-dwelling
organisms that can not leave the zone. The midsummer extent of the hypoxic zone has more than
doubled since it was first systematically mapped in 1985 (Rabalais and others, 1999). The
largest hypoxic zone measured to date occurred in the summer of 1999,
(fig. 2)
when its size was reported to be 20,000 km² (square kilometers), or about the size of the
State of New Jersey (Rabalais, 1999). In the summer of 2000, following drought conditions in
the basin, the area of the hypoxic zone was about 4,400 km², one of the smallest sizes
measured to date (Rabalais, 2000).
Two conditions are necessary for the formation of hypoxia-stratification of the water column
in the Gulf and the presence of organic matter to consume oxygen. The Mississippi River
produces both conditions through large inputs of freshwater and nutrients. High streamflow in
the spring and summer provides a large influx of freshwater, which promotes stratification in
the Gulf with warmer, less dense water overlying colder, more dense salt water. Nutrients from
the Mississippi River fuel the production of algae in the surface water of the Gulf. Organic
material from the algae and other organisms settles into the bottom water of the Gulf where it
is decomposed by bacteria, which consume oxygen in the process. Stratification blocks the
replenishment of oxygen from the surface, and hypoxia develops. Hypoxia may persist until late
fall when stratification breaks up because of reduced freshwater inputs, cooler temperatures,
and mixing by storms.
One of the principal causes for the increasing size of the hypoxic zone is believed to be the
increasing supply of nitrogen, particularly nitrate, delivered to the Gulf each year from the
Mississippi River Basin. Nitrate concentrations have increased several fold during the past
100 years in streams draining some parts of the Mississippi Basin, and the annual delivery of
nitrate from the Mississippi River to the Gulf has nearly tripled since the late 1950's
(Goolsby and others, 1999). The increased delivery of nitrate can magnify the production of
organic carbon in the Gulf, which can lead to increased hypoxia. For example, one atom of
nitrate-N can be responsible for producing 6.6 atoms of organic carbon through photosynthesis
(Redfield, 1958). Further, some of the nitrogen is recycled to produce more organic carbon.
Rabalais and others (1999) suggest that an atom of nitrogen from the Mississippi River is
recycled about four times, on average, in the Gulf before it is lost from the water column.
Therefore, the approximately 0.95 million metric tons of nitrate as nitrogen discharged
annually from the Mississippi River Basin (Goolsby and others, 1999) could potentially produce
more than 20 million metric tons of organic carbon annually in the Gulf of Mexico.
The Mississippi River and its distributary, the Atchafalaya River, drain an area of nearly
3,208,700 km² or about 41 percent of the conterminous United States. It is the largest
river basin in North America and the third largest river basin in the world. The basin drains
all or parts of 30 States and extends from the Appalachian Mountains in the east to the Rocky
Mountains in the west, and from southern Canada to the Gulf of Mexico. About 70 million people
live in the basin. The climate, land use, soils, and population vary widely across the basin.
The annual runoff ranges from less than 5 cm/yr (centimeters per year) in the arid western
part of the basin to more than 60 cm/yr in the humid eastern part. The basin contains one of
the most productive farming regions in the world. About 58 percent of the basin is in
cropland. Other significant land uses and their percentage of the basin include woodland (18
percent), range and barren land (21 percent), wetlands and water (2.4 percent), and urban land
(0.6 percent). The central part of the basin produces the majority of the corn, soybean,
wheat, cattle, hogs, and chickens in the United States.
The majority of all agricultural chemicals used in the United States are applied to cropland
within the basin. For example, about 7 million metric tons of nitrogen in commercial
fertilizers are applied annually in the basin. In addition, the central part of the basin has
been subjected to extensive agricultural drainage during the past 125 years (Zucker and Brown,
1998) to lower the water table and make the land suitable for farming. This practice "short
circuits" the flow of ground water by draining the top of the saturated zone directly into
agricultural drains and then to nearby streams. Nitrate concentrations in agricultural drains
can be very high--20 to 40 mg/L or more (Zucker and Brown 1998).
Nitrogen occurs principally in two forms in streams--nitrate and organic nitrogen (dissolved
and particulate). Nitrate is the most soluble and mobile form of nitrogen. Historical records
(Palmer, 1903; Dole, 1909) show that the average concentrations of nitrate in the Mississippi
River and some of its tributaries have increased several fold since the early 1900's in parts
of Iowa, Illinois, Indiana, Minnesota, and Ohio (fig. 3). Although the increase in average nitrate concentrations in
the lower Mississippi River main stem has not been as dramatic as in some smaller streams,
concentrations still increased by a factor of about 2.6 between 1905-07 and 1980-96. Most of
the increase in the lower Mississippi River main stem occurred between the late 1960's and the
early 1980's. During that period, the average annual nitrate concentration in water flowing
to the Gulf of Mexico more than doubled (Goolsby and others, 1999).
In contrast, it is estimated that the concentration of particulate organic nitrogen in the
lower Mississippi River has decreased about 50 percent since the early 1900's, primarily
because of reduced suspended sediment flux caused by construction of several large reservoirs
on the Missouri River in the 1950's and 1960's (Meade, 1995). The dissolved organic nitrogen
concentration is believed to have changed very little during the last 100 years.
In an average year the Mississippi River discharges 1.57 million metric tons of nitrogen into
the Gulf of Mexico. This includes about 0.95 million metric tons as nitrate and 0.58 million
metric tons as organic nitrogen (Goolsby and others, 1999). About three-fourths of the
nitrogen is discharged to the Gulf through the Mississippi River channel and the remainder is
diverted into the Atchafalaya River, which also discharges to the Gulf.
The annual flux of nitrate to the Gulf from the Mississippi River Basin increased
significantly during the period 1955-99 (fig. 4). A Kendall's tau test for trend shows the increase in
nitrate flux to be highly significant (p less than 0.001), with a trend slope of approximately
19,000 metric tons per year. During 1955-70, nitrate flux averaged 328,000 metric tons per
year. However, during 1980-99 the nitrate flux averaged 969,000 metric tons per year, almost a
threefold increase. Nearly all of this increase in nitrate flux occurred between 1970 and
1983. There was no statistically significant trend, upward or downward, in nitrate from 1980
to 1999. Part of the increase in flux can be attributed to an increase in precipitation and
streamflow (fig. 4). The average annual streamflow during 1980-99 was about 30 percent higher
than during 1955-70. Higher precipitation during the latter period may have caused more
leaching and transport of nitrate from soil and ground-water systems in the basin. On a
seasonal basis, the period of highest nitrate flux to the Gulf is usually the spring and early
summer, preceding the development of hypoxia in the Gulf.
The principal sources of nitrogen inputs to the Mississippi Basin are summarized in
figure 5. They include soil mineralization,
fertilizer, legumes and pasture, animal manure, atmospheric deposition, and municipal and
industrial point sources. Some of these represent new inputs of nitrogen to the basin, and
some represent recycling of nitrogen already in the basin. However, all are potential sources
of nitrogen that can enter the Mississippi River and the Gulf of Mexico. The largest annual
inputs are from commercial fertilizer and soil mineralization. The largest change in annual
nitrogen input has been in fertilizer, which has increased more than sixfold since the 1950's.
The geographic distribution of the combined annual nitrogen inputs from the known major
sources is shown in figure 6A for the
133 hydrologic accounting units in the basin. The estimated total nitrogen (nitrate plus
organic and ammonia nitrogen) yields in streams draining the accounting units are shown in
figure 6B. The yields are the nitrogen
outputs from the basins normalized to basin drainage areas. The similarities in the patterns
of nitrogen inputs and outputs are striking. As might be expected, the higher nitrogen yields
in streams (1,001-3,050 kg/km²/yr) are from basins where the nitrogen inputs are higher.
These basins also tend to be in areas of the Mississippi Basin where precipitation is high and
subsurface drainage is used extensively. The high nitrogen inputs coupled with high
precipitation and the associated runoff, generally high water tables, and extensive subsurface
drainage result in high rates of transport of soluble nitrate into streams and, eventually, to
the Mississippi River and the Gulf of Mexico.
Relations between nitrogen inputs from various sources and nitrogen yields for 42 large
drainage basins were analyzed using multiple regression techniques (Goolsby and others, 1999).
This analysis showed that about 89 percent of the annual total nitrogen flux to the Gulf (1.57
million metric tons) was from nonpoint sources, and the remaining 11 percent was from
municipal and industrial point sources. The estimated contributions of both nitrate and total
nitrogen from specific sources are given in table 1. Alexander and others (2000)
obtained similar values for total nitrogen flux to the Gulf using a model referred to as
SPARROW.
A number of factors are important in determining the annual flux of nitrate from the
Mississippi River Basin to the Gulf of Mexico. These include nitrogen inputs to the
Mississippi Basin, nitrogen removal in harvested crops, and precipitation, which affects the
storage and leaching of nitrogen from the soil/ground-water system. Most of the annual
nitrogen input is removed in harvested crops or lost through denitrification, volatilization,
and soil immobilization. The difference between the annual nitrogen inputs and nitrogen
removal by these various processes is referred to here as the residual nitrogen and represents
nitrogen potentially available for transport into ground water, streams, and eventually the
Gulf. The residual nitrogen can be stored in the soil/ground-water system, where some can be
used by crops in subsequent years and some (mostly nitrate) can be leached into streams by
precipitation. High amounts of precipitation leach more nitrogen to streams than low amounts.
Goolsby and others (1999) estimated the annual nitrogen inputs, removal, and residuals for the
Mississippi Basin for 1955-96. These variables and a number of related variables, which could
be quantified through this time period including those in figure 5, were examined in statistical models to determine which ones
could best explain the observed annual nitrate flux to the Gulf. The three most statistically
significant variables were, in order of importance, annual basinwide nitrogen fertilizer use 2
years previous, mean annual streamflow for the current year, and the basinwide residual
nitrogen for the previous year. The regression model shown below has an R² of 0.89.
Nflux = 0.049*F2 + 36*Q - 0.094*R1,
(1)
where Nflux is nitrate flux to the Gulf, in metric tons per year;
where F2 is fertilizer use in the entire basin
2 years previous, in metric tons;
where Q is the current year mean annual discharge to the
Gulf, in cubic meters per second;
where R1 is the nitrogen residual for the
previous year, in metric tons.
A comparison of the nitrate flux predicted from the regression model and the observed nitrate
flux (see annual flux in fig. 4) is shown in figure 7.
F2 explains about 68 percent of the variation in nitrate flux and explains much of
the increasing trend in nitrogen flux. Q explains an additional 18 percent of the variation in
nitrogen flux and explains much of the observed year-to-year variability. R1
explains another 3 percent of the variation in nitrogen flux. For most years, except 1972-74,
the model shows excellent agreement between observed and predicted values. Streamflow was very
high during these 3 years (see fig. 4), and nitrate flux is greatly over predicted. Results for
1961 are similar, although streamflow was considerably lower. Little excess nitrate may have
been present in the soil/ground-water system for leaching during these periods.
The observed fluxes indicate that the nitrate transport to the Gulf has not increased
appreciably since the early 1980's. However, the year-to-year variability has become large,
probably because of variability in precipitation and an abundant reservoir of soluble nitrate
in the soil/ground-water system. Thus, nitrate inputs to the Gulf appear to have stabilized
for the current level of nitrogen inputs and outputs. However, in future years the flux of
nitrate to the Gulf will likely respond quickly and perhaps dramatically to variations in
precipitation and runoff. Because of the amount of nitrate stored in the soil/ground-water
system, fluxes of nitrate will be low in dry years and high in wet years. Also, because of
the huge storage capacity of the soil/ground-water system, the flux of nitrate will likely
change very slowly in response to increases or decreases in nitrogen inputs to the basin.
Much of the material in this report has been published previously (Goolsby, 2000).
- Alexander, R.A., Smith, R.B., and Schwarz, G.E., 2000, Effect of stream channel
size on the delivery of nitrogen to the Gulf of Mexico: Nature, v. 403. p. 758-761.
- Dole, R.B., 1909, The quality of surface waters in the United States, part
I.--analysis of waters east of the one hundredth meridian: U.S. Geological Survey
Water-Supply Paper 236, 123 p.
- Goolsby, D.A., 2000, Mississippi Basin nitrogen flux believed to cause Gulf
hypoxia: EOS, American Geophysical Union, Transactions, v. 81, no. 29, p. 321-327.
- Goolsby, D.A., Battaglin, W.A., Lawrence, G.B., Artz, R.S., Aulenbach, B.T.,
Hooper, R.P., Keeney, D.R., and Stensland, G.J., 1999, Flux and sources of nutrients in
the Mississippi-Atchafalaya River Basin--topic 3 report for the integrated assessment on
hypoxia in the Gulf of Mexico: Silver Spring, Md., NOAA Coastal Ocean Office, NOAA
Coastal Ocean Program Decision Analysis Series No. 17, 130 p.
- Meade, R.H., 1995, Contaminants in the Mississippi River: U.S. Geological Survey
Circular 1133, 140 p.
- Palmer, A.W., 1903, Chemical survey of the waters of Illinois--report for the
years 1897-1902: University of Illinois, 254 p.
- Rabalais, N.N., 1999, Press release dated July 29, 1999: Chauvin, La., Louisiana
Universities Consortium.
- __2000, Press release dated July 26, 2000: Chauvin, La., Louisiana Universities
Consortium.
- Rabalais, N.N., Turner, R.E., Dubravko, J., Dortsch, Q., and Wisman, W.J., Jr.,
1999, Characterization of hypoxia--topic 1 report for the integrated assessment on
hypoxia in the Gulf of Mexico: Silver Spring, Md., NOAA Coastal Ocean Office, NOAA
Coastal Ocean Program Decision Analysis Series No. 17, 167 p.
- Redfield, A.C., 1958, The biological control of chemical factors in the
environment: American Scientist, September 1958, p. 205-221.
- Zucker, L.A., and Brown, L.C., 1998, Agricultural drainage--water quality impacts
and subsurface drainage studies in the Midwest: Ohio State University Extension Bulletin
871, 40 p.
Additional information on hypoxia in the Gulf of Mexico and nutrients in the Mississippi
Basin, including a downloadable graphics file, can be obtained at the following web sites:
http://wwwrcolka.cr.usgs.gov/ midconherb/hypoxia.html
(downloadable graphics files)
http://www.nos.noaa.gov/products/ pubs_hypox.html
http://water.usgs.gov/nawqa/sparrow/
http://water.usgs.gov/nawqa/nutrient.html
http://water.usgs.gov/nasqan/
For additional information, contact:
Chief, office of Water Quality
U.S. Geological Survey
412 National Center Place
12201 Sunrise Valley Drive
Reston, Virginia 20192