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MA-100
--- Abstract
Nitrogen and
Pesticide Concentrations in an Agricultural Basin in North-Central
Connecticut
Water-Resources
Investigations Report 97-4076
By
John R. Mullaney and Marc J. Zimmerman
Concentrations
and yields of selected nitrogen compounds and herbicides
fluctuated with changes in river discharge during a stormflow
event in samples from three subbasins of the Scantic River in
north- central Connecticut during May 31-June 2, 1992.
Concentrations of nitrite plus nitrate nitrogen and the herbicide
metabolite desethyl atrazine decreased with increasing river
discharge, i ndicating that the ground-water runoff component of
streamflow contained larger concentrations of these constituents
than the surface-water runoff component. Concentrations of ammonia
plus organic nitrogen, atrazine, and metolachlor increased with
increasing river discharge, indicating that overland runoff from
fertilizer and pesticide-treated fields contained larger
concentrations of these constituents than baseflow. Analysis of
additional water-quality data from Broad Brook at Broad Brook,
Connecticut, from 1993 to 1994 showed that concentrations of
nitrate nitrogen had an inverse relation with streamflow,
indicating that ground water was a major nitrate nitrogen source.
Concentrations and yields of ammonia nitrogen and total organic
nitrogen in Broad Brook increased when streamflow exceeded 100
cubic feet per second, indicating that large concentrations of
these nitrogen constituents are derived primarily from overland
runoff from agricultural fields.
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