“…However, a concomitant increase in riverine N exports from the Willamette River Basin has not been observed (Metson et al, 2020) prompting questions about the fate of surplus N. Soil surplus N can be lost through gaseous releases, such as via the process of denitrification, leached to the groundwater, or accumulated within the soil profile. Denitrification, or the process by which nitrate is sequentially reduced to molecular dinitrogen under mostly anaerobic conditions, largely depends on various factors like soil type, reduction capacity, degree of saturation, and water residence time (Lenhart et al, 2021;Oh et al, 2023), which can impact oxygen concentrations and the presence of electrons donors (i.e., reactive organic carbon or reduced minerals). However, most studies in agricultural settings have shown that denitrification tends to be very limited in the unsaturated vadose zone (Green et al, 2008;Onsoy et al, 2005;Parkin & Meisinger, 1989;Rivett et al, 2007;.…”