Influence of land use change on nitrate sources and pollutant enrichment in surface and groundwater of a growing urban areas
Abstract
In the present study, three-year (1997, 2008 and 2017) satellite images as well as different hydro chemical parameters, nitrogen and oxygen isotopic composition of nitrate were used to examine
the impacts of land use and land cover change on surface and groundwater quality. Through
isotopic composition, sources of surface and groundwater nitrate contamination was also
elucidated. The results showed significant land use transition whereby land use changed from
forest and bare land to agricultural land and built-up areas. A slight reduction in the size of areas
covered by water bodies was also observed, from 8 km2
in 1997 to 7.4 km2
in 2017. Results
indicate differences in nitrate concentration that mirror land use changes. Samples with elevated
levels of nitrate above 10 mg/L were located near agricultural fields and areas with intensive
livestock keeping activities. In groundwater, ẟ
15N-nitrate and ẟ
18O-nitrate ranged from 3.2‰ to
20.1‰ with a mean value of 11.7 ± 1.8‰ and from 2.1‰ to 12.0‰ with mean value of 5.4 ±
1.8‰, respectively indicating nitrate was derived from inorganic fertilizer, manure and sewage. In
surface water, ẟ
15N-nitrate and ẟ
18O-nitrate ranged from 2.4‰ to 19.3‰ with mean value of 4.9 ±
1.4‰ and from 1.5‰ to 21.9‰ with a mean value of 13.5 ± 2.8‰, respectively indicating nitrate
from soil N. Isotopic composition data suggest sources of nitrate in groundwater dominated by
synthetic and organic fertilizer application and to a lesser extent a natural soil nitrate source.