Vegetative and structural characteristics of agricultural drainages in the Mississippi Delta landscapes
Document Type
Article
Publication Title
ENVIRONMENTAL POLLUTION
PubMed ID
15325456
Abstract
Agricultural drainage ditches in the Mississippi Alluvial Delta landscape vary from edge-of-field waterways to sizeable drainages. Ditch attributes vary with size, location and maintenance and may aid in mitigation of contaminants from agricultural fields. The goal of this study was to better understand how vegetative characteristics affect water quality in conveyance structures in the context of ditch class and surrounding land use. Characterization of 36 agricultural ditches included presence of riparian buffer strips, water depth, surrounding land use, vegetative cover, and associated aqueous physicochemical parameters. Vegetation was assessed quantitatively, obtaining stem counts in a sub-sample of ditch sites, using random quadrat method. Physical features varied with ditch size and vegetative diversity was higher in larger structures. Polygonum sp. was the dominant bed vegetation and was ubiquitous among site sizes. Macrophytes varied from aquatic to upland species, and included Leersia sp. and upland grasses (Poaceae family) in all drainage size classes. Percent cover of bed and bank varied from 0 to 100% and 70 to 100%, respectively, and highest nutrient values were measured in sites with no buffer strips. These conveyance structures and surrounding buffer zones are being ranked for their ability to reduce excess nutrients, suspended solids, and pesticides associated with runoff. (C) 2004 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.
First Page
403
Last Page
411
DOI
10.1016/j.envpol.2004.05.026
Publication Date
2004
Recommended Citation
Bouldin, Jennifer L.; Farris, Jerry Lin; Moore, Matt T.; and Cooper, Catherine M., "Vegetative and structural characteristics of agricultural drainages in the Mississippi Delta landscapes" (2004). Faculty Publications. 2.
https://arch.astate.edu/scm-biofac/2