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Estimates of diffuse phosphorus sources in surface waters of the United States using a spatially referenced watershed model

January 1, 2004

The statistical watershed model SPARROW (SPAtially Referenced Regression On Watershed attributes) was used to estimate the sources and transport of total phosphorus (TP) in surface waters of the United States. We calibrated the model using stream measurements of TP from 336 watersheds of mixed land use and spatial data on topography, soils, stream hydrography, and land use (agriculture, forest, shrub/grass, urban). The model explained 87% of the spatial variability in log transformed stream TP flux (kg yr-1). Predictions of stream yield (kg ha-1 yr-1) were typically within 45% of the observed values at the monitoring sites. The model identified appreciable effects of soils, streams, and reservoirs on TP transport, The estimated aquatic rates of phosphorus removal declined with increasing stream size and rates of water flushing in reservoirs (i.e. areal hydraulic loads). A phosphorus budget for the 2.9 million km2 Mississippi River Basin provides a detailed accounting of TP delivery to streams, the removal of TP in surface waters, and the stream export of TP from major interior watersheds for sources associated with each land-use type. 

Publication Year 2004
Title Estimates of diffuse phosphorus sources in surface waters of the United States using a spatially referenced watershed model
DOI 10.2166/wst.2004.0150
Authors R. B. Alexander, R. A. Smith, G. E. Schwarz
Publication Type Article
Publication Subtype Journal Article
Series Title Water Science and Technology
Index ID 70027214
Record Source USGS Publications Warehouse