Hysteresis Patterns of Watershed Nitrogen Retention and Loss over the
past 50 years in United States Hydrological Basins
Abstract
Patterns of watershed nitrogen (N) retention and loss are shaped by how
watershed biogeochemical processes retain, biogeochemically transform,
and lose incoming atmospheric deposition of N. Loss patterns represented
by concentration, discharge, and their associated stream exports are
important indicators of watershed N retention patterns because they
reveal hysteresis patterns (i.e. return to initial state) or one-way
transition patterns (i.e. new steady state) that provide insight into
watershed conditions driving long term stream trends. We examined the
degree to which Continental U.S. (CONUS) scale deposition patterns (wet
and dry atmospheric deposition), vegetation trends, and stream trends
can be potential indicators of watershed N-saturation and retention
conditions, and how watershed N retention and losses vary over space and
time. By synthesizing changes and modalities in watershed nitrogen loss
patterns based on stream data from 2200 U.S. watersheds over a 50 year
record, our work characterized a new hysteresis conceptual model based
on factors driving watershed N-retention and loss, including hydrology,
atmospheric inputs, land-use, stream temperature, elevation, and
vegetation. Our results show that atmospheric deposition and vegetation
productivity groups that have strong positive or negative trends over
time are associated with patterns of stream loss that uniquely indicate
the stage of watershed N-saturation and reveal unique characteristics of
watershed N-retention hysteresis patterns. In particular, regions with
increasing atmospheric deposition and increasing vegetation
health/biomass patterns have the highest N-retention capacity, become
increasingly N-saturated over time, and are associated with the
strongest declines in stream N exports—a pattern that is consistent
across all land cover categories. In particular, the second largest
factor explaining watershed N-retention was in-stream temperature and
dissolved organic carbon concentration trends, while land-use explained
the least amount of variability in watershed N-retention. Our CONUS
scale investigation supports an updated hysteresis conceptual model of
watershed N-retention and loss, providing great value to using long-term
stream monitoring data as indicators of watershed N hysteresis patterns.