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
Associated Organization
Publisher
U.S. Geological Survey
Status
Format
Rights Holder
Minnesota Water Research Digital Library
Rights Management
Creative Commons