Nitrate Movement

Most soil minerals are negatively charged at normal pH and the net interaction with anions such as nitrate is a repulsion from particle surfaces. This repulsion is termed negative adsorption or anion exclusion.

Anions are excluded from the area immediately adjacent to mineral surfaces due to preferential attraction of cations to these sites. This process has a direct impact on the transport of anions through the soil for it effectively excludes anions from the slowest moving portion of the soil water volume found closest to the charged particle surfaces (Jury et al, 1991). In effect, the net pathway of the anion through the soil is shorter than it would be if all the soil water had to be used (Thomas and McMahon, 1972).

Nitrate may be transported with surface runoff, lateral flow or percolation. To calculate the amount of nitrate moved with the water, the concentration of nitrate in the mobile water is calculated. This concentration is then multiplied by the volume of water moving in each pathway to obtain the mass of nitrate lost from the soil layer.

The concentration of nitrate in the mobile water fraction is calculated:

Nitrate removed in surface runoff is calculated:

Nitrate removed in lateral flow is calculated:

Nitrate moved to the underlying layer by percolation is calculated:

Table 4:2-1: SWAT+ input variables that pertain to nitrate transport.

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