Combined effects of stream hydrology and land use on basin-scale
hyporheic zone denitrification in the Columbia River Basin
Abstract
Denitrification in the hyporheic zone (HZ) of river corridors is crucial
to removing excess nitrogen in rivers from anthropogenic activities.
However, previous modeling studies of the effectiveness of river
corridors in removing excess nitrogen via denitrification were often
limited to the reach-scale and low-order stream watersheds. We developed
a basin-scale river corridor model for the Columbia River Basin with
random forest models to identify the dominant factors associated with
the spatial variation of HZ denitrification. Our modeling results
suggest that the combined effects of hydrologic variability in reaches
and substrate availability influenced by land use are associated with
the spatial variability of modeled HZ denitrification at the basin
scale. Hyporheic exchange flux can explain most of spatial variation of
denitrification amounts in reaches of different sizes, while among the
reaches affected by different land uses, the combination of hyporheic
exchange flux and stream dissolved organic carbon (DOC) concentration
can explain the denitrification differences. Also, we can generalize
that the most influential watershed and channel variables controlling
denitrification variation are channel morphology parameters (median
grain size (D50), stream slope), climate (annual precipitation and
evapotranspiration), and stream DOC-related parameters (percent of shrub
area). The modeling framework in our study can serve as a valuable tool
to identify the limiting factors in removing excess nitrogen pollution
in large river basins where direct measurement is often infeasible.