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Depth-dependent phosphorus leaching risks in littoral soils of Lake Dianchi under extreme rainfall.

Ding L, Zhou W, Liu R, Shih K, Deng X

Soil Health

That green scum on your local lake or pond this summer may be fed not just by farm runoff, but by the very shoreline plants and soils that were supposed to stop it — and knowing which soil layers are the problem could change how we plant and amend riparian buffers everywhere.

Scientists studied the soil along the edge of a nutrient-choked lake in China, measuring how much phosphorus — the fertilizer-like nutrient that causes algae blooms — moves through different soil layers during heavy rain. They found that two zones, roughly at the surface and about a foot down, are especially 'leaky': they hold huge amounts of phosphorus but can't hold onto it when water rushes through. Even the deeper soil, which seemed safe at first, started releasing phosphorus after being waterlogged for a long time.

Key Findings

1

All soil layers contained extremely high total phosphorus (1.19–2.21 g per kg of soil), but the 0–10 cm and 30–40 cm layers released phosphorus the fastest and in the greatest amounts during simulated storms.

2

During leaching tests, phosphorus in the water leaving the soil exceeded the phosphorus in the water entering it — meaning storms mobilize both incoming runoff and phosphorus already stored in the soil.

3

The deepest layer tested (50–60 cm) initially absorbed phosphorus well, but released iron-bound phosphorus under prolonged waterlogged, low-oxygen conditions, indicating it provides only short-term buffering.

chevron_right Technical Summary

Soils at the edges of a heavily polluted Chinese lake hold massive stores of phosphorus that heavy rainstorms can flush into the water, worsening the algae blooms that choke the lake. Two specific soil depth zones act as 'leaky layers' that rapidly release phosphorus during storms, undermining restoration efforts.

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Abstract Preview

Littoral zones and constructed riparian buffers of eutrophic lakes receive long-term non-point phosphorus (P) inputs and are widely used to buffer agricultural runoff, yet under intensifying rainfa...

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hub This connects to 10 other discoveries — soil-health, water-quality, riparian-buffers +2 more 5 related articles

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