Simulating the role of biogeochemical hotspots in driving nitrogen
export from dryland watersheds
Abstract
Climate change and nitrogen (N) pollution are altering biogeochemical
and ecohydrological processes in dryland watersheds, increasing N
export, and threatening water quality. While simulation models are
useful for projecting how N export will change in the future, most
models ignore biogeochemical “hotspots” that develop in drylands as
moist microsites become hydrologically disconnected from plant roots
when soils dry out. These hotspots enable N to accumulate over dry
periods and rapidly flush to streams when soils wet up. To better
project future N export, we developed a framework for representing
hotspots using the ecohydrological model RHESSys. We then conducted a
series of virtual experiments to understand how uncertainties in model
structure and parameters influence N export. Modeled export was
sensitive to the abundance of hotspots in a watershed, increasing
linearly and then reaching an asymptote with increasing hotspot
abundance. Peak streamflow N was also sensitive to a soil moisture
threshold at which subsurface flow from hotspots reestablished, allowing
N to be transferred to streams; it increased and then decreased with an
increasing threshold value. Finally, N export was generally higher when
water diffused out of hotspots slowly. In a case study, we found that
when hotspots were modeled explicitly, peak streamflow nitrate export
increased by 29%, enabling us to better capture the timing and
magnitude of N losses observed in the field. This modeling framework can
improve projections of N export in watersheds where hotspots play an
increasingly important role in water quality.