2014
DOI: 10.1016/j.agwat.2013.09.001
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Effectiveness of low-grade weirs for nutrient removal in an agricultural landscape in the Lower Mississippi Alluvial Valley

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Cited by 31 publications
(26 citation statements)
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References 42 publications
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“…At both sites, the hydrologic characteristics of the flow events were highly variable with some flow statistics varying by two or more orders of magnitude (table 3). The hydrologic characteristics and variability found in BLT1 and LWSR are consistent with findings of other research on agricultural ditches in Mississippi (Baker et al 2018;Littlejohn et al 2014).…”
Section: Methodssupporting
confidence: 90%
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“…At both sites, the hydrologic characteristics of the flow events were highly variable with some flow statistics varying by two or more orders of magnitude (table 3). The hydrologic characteristics and variability found in BLT1 and LWSR are consistent with findings of other research on agricultural ditches in Mississippi (Baker et al 2018;Littlejohn et al 2014).…”
Section: Methodssupporting
confidence: 90%
“…In this study, event concentrations for a given constituent can span two to three orders of magnitude (table 1), and event flows are similarly variable (table 3). The high variability of water quality and hydrology in the MAP has also been documented elsewhere (Littlejohn et al 2014). A comparison of power across the various scenarios (percentage change versus number of sampled events) for both the difference-in-median and difference-in-intercept tests highlight why we may not have detected many changesthe number of sampled events was low given the natural variability of event con-…”
Section: Potential Changes Between Early and Late Periodssupporting
confidence: 63%
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“…Gilliam and Skaggs () noted that controlled drainage had the potential to alter both hydrologic characteristics and nutrient efflux. Earlier field studies on low‐grade weirs have noted frustrations with alternation of ditches from source to sink depending on rainfall patterns (Kröger et al ., ) and seasonal effects (Littlejohn et al ., ), which complicated the clarity of research findings. However, it is reasonable to hypothesize that weirs should produce results similar to those of other controlled drainage methods because the mechanism is similar — to retain and hold water.…”
Section: Low‐grade Weirsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Littlejohn et al . () reported median NO 3 − load reductions of 25%, with a 14% reduction in dissolved P in a field‐scale evaluation of storm event runoff.…”
Section: Low‐grade Weirsmentioning
confidence: 99%