Effects of Farming Systems on Ground Water Quality at the Management Systems Evaluation Area Near Princeton, Minnesota, 1991-95

Document
Description
Ground-water quality in an unconfined sand and gravel aquifer was monitored during 1991-95 at the Minnesota Management Systems Evaluation Area (MSEA) near Princeton, Minnesota. The objectives of the study were to: (1) describe the effects of three farming systems on groundwater quality, and (2) evaluate the factors affecting ground-water quality and transport of agricultural chemicals at the site. Concentrations of nitrate nitrogen (nitrate-N) in the upper 1 meter (m) of the saturated zone were greatest beneath the two cropped areas having a potato-sweet corn annual rotation (median concentrations of 23 and 22 mg/L). Concentrations of nitrate-N were least beneath a cropped area having a field cornsoybean annual rotation (median of 14 mg/L); another cropped area having the field corn-soybean rotation had similar nitrate-N concentrations to those beneath a cropped area having field corn in consecutive years (continuous corn)(medians of 17 mg/L). Concentrations of atrazine plus metabolites de-ethylatrazine (DEA) and de-isopropylatrazine (DIA), atrazine plus metabolites, were significantly greater during 1994-95 than during 1992- 93 beneath all cropped areas in the upper 1 m of the saturated zone. Concentrations of atrazine plus metabolites during 1994-95 were greatest beneath the continuous corn (median of 1.07 (ig/L), intermediate beneath one cropped area with the potato-sweet corn rotation (median of 0.37
Date Issued
1998
Number of Pages
60
Decade
Publisher
U.S. Geological Survey
Rights Holder
Minnesota Water Research Digital Library
Rights Management
Creative Commons