Nitrate in the groundwater of the
lower Yakima Valley, Washington
frequently exceeds the Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) maximum
contaminant level standard for potable water (10 mg/L), impacting
communities with disadvantaged socioeconomic status. Nitrogen and
oxygen isotopic signatures were determined for nitrate in soil leachates
and irrigation return flow. Isotope signatures for nitrate from soil
leachate had significant overlap with both the isotope signatures
of naturally occurring soil nitrate at the nearby Hanford site, Washington
and of groundwater nitrate attributed to manure and fertilizer application
in a local EPA study. A mass balance calculation using Δ17O data suggests that there is a consistent ∼9% atmospheric
contribution to nitrate in soil accumulations below caliche layers
at several locations. This agrees with other research on the atmospheric
contribution to naturally occurring soil nitrates in areas with similar
mean annual precipitation values. We argue that this consistent ∼9%
atmospheric component indicates that soil nitrate at depth is dominated
by naturally occurring, biologically fixed nitrate across multiple
sites. We suggest the flushing of naturally occurring soil nitrate
to groundwater during land use conversion to irrigated agriculture
may represent a previously overlooked significant nitrate input to
aquifers in this region.
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