The Wetlands Handbook 2009
DOI: 10.1002/9781444315813.ch19
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The Role of Buffer Zones for Agricultural Runoff

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Cited by 12 publications
(11 citation statements)
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“…An example of this is provided by the overland flow zone at Kismeldon Meadows, southwest England (see Figs 1(c) and 2), where high concentrations of NO 3 in runoff from agricultural land are reduced in this small wetland area, but the valued Molinia caerulea grassland has converted to a less valued Glyceria fluitans dominated sward, as illustrated by the green patch evident in Fig. 1(c) (Blackwell et al 2009). Matthews et al (2009Matthews et al ( , 2010 provide another example of how small-scale wetlands can deliver ESs to a significant degree, but also with trade-offs.…”
Section: Trade-offs Between Wetland Ecosystem Servicesmentioning
confidence: 99%
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“…An example of this is provided by the overland flow zone at Kismeldon Meadows, southwest England (see Figs 1(c) and 2), where high concentrations of NO 3 in runoff from agricultural land are reduced in this small wetland area, but the valued Molinia caerulea grassland has converted to a less valued Glyceria fluitans dominated sward, as illustrated by the green patch evident in Fig. 1(c) (Blackwell et al 2009). Matthews et al (2009Matthews et al ( , 2010 provide another example of how small-scale wetlands can deliver ESs to a significant degree, but also with trade-offs.…”
Section: Trade-offs Between Wetland Ecosystem Servicesmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…In many cases it is not their spatial extent that is important, but the degree of hydrological interaction that affects their ability to deliver services. As described by Blackwell et al (2009), if the overall area of the wetland is small but the length of interface with agricultural land is long, processes such as denitrification are optimized (Haycock and Burt 1993). Subsequently, although small wetlands may not appear to be delivering significant ESs, we are now beginning to acknowledge their cumulative significance and importance as components of a larger system (Johnston 1994, Trochlell andBernthal 1998).…”
Section: Defining Wetlandsmentioning
confidence: 99%
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