Nutrient management in the Chesapeake region largely has focused on agricultural sources and on municipal wastewater treatment plants. This workshop was convened to advise the Chesapeake Bay Program on the role of atmospheric deposition as a source of nitrogen pollution to the Bay. The most recent evidence suggests that at least one third and probably significantly more of all the nitrogen that reaches Chesapeake Bay comes from atmospheric deposition, which also contributes to acid rain. Most of this deposition falls onto the landscape, and then a portion of it runs off and eventually reaches the Bay.This project is part of the Cornell University Agricultural Ecosystems Program: Understanding Sources and Sinks of Nutrients and Sediment i...
University of Minnesota M.S. thesis. December 2019. Major: Civil Engineering. Advisor: Paul Capel. ...
The Atmospheric Nitrogen Compounds II: Emissions, Transport, Transformation, Deposition and Assessme...
Author Posting. © The Author(s), 2013. This is the author's version of the work. It is posted here ...
Excessive nitrogen can enter estuarine and coastal areas from land, disturbing coastal ecosystems an...
Atmospheric deposition is among the largest pathways of nitrogen loading to the Chesapeake Bay Water...
The Chesapeake Bay Agreement calls for a 40% reduction of controllable phosphorus and nitrogen to th...
This item was presentation #5 at the April 2007 Water Quality Short Course. More information on the ...
Although rivers are the primary source of dissolved inorganic nitrogen (DIN) inputs to the Chesapeak...
Excessive nutrient inputs from land, particularly nitrogen (N), have been found to increase the occu...
Carbon and nitrogen loading to streams and rivers contributes to eutrophication as well as greenhous...
Abstract: Mitigating nonpoint pollution is the single greatest challenge to improving coastal waters...
Atmospheric deposition of nitrogen species represents an additional nutrient source to natural envir...
Nutrient and sediment runoff from the six states and Washington, DC that form the Chesapeake Bay wat...
While nitrogen is an essential nutrient in aquatic systems, elevated levels of nitrogen can be fatal...
Humans have altered nitrogen (N) cycling on a global scale, and elevated nitrogen levels are charact...
University of Minnesota M.S. thesis. December 2019. Major: Civil Engineering. Advisor: Paul Capel. ...
The Atmospheric Nitrogen Compounds II: Emissions, Transport, Transformation, Deposition and Assessme...
Author Posting. © The Author(s), 2013. This is the author's version of the work. It is posted here ...
Excessive nitrogen can enter estuarine and coastal areas from land, disturbing coastal ecosystems an...
Atmospheric deposition is among the largest pathways of nitrogen loading to the Chesapeake Bay Water...
The Chesapeake Bay Agreement calls for a 40% reduction of controllable phosphorus and nitrogen to th...
This item was presentation #5 at the April 2007 Water Quality Short Course. More information on the ...
Although rivers are the primary source of dissolved inorganic nitrogen (DIN) inputs to the Chesapeak...
Excessive nutrient inputs from land, particularly nitrogen (N), have been found to increase the occu...
Carbon and nitrogen loading to streams and rivers contributes to eutrophication as well as greenhous...
Abstract: Mitigating nonpoint pollution is the single greatest challenge to improving coastal waters...
Atmospheric deposition of nitrogen species represents an additional nutrient source to natural envir...
Nutrient and sediment runoff from the six states and Washington, DC that form the Chesapeake Bay wat...
While nitrogen is an essential nutrient in aquatic systems, elevated levels of nitrogen can be fatal...
Humans have altered nitrogen (N) cycling on a global scale, and elevated nitrogen levels are charact...
University of Minnesota M.S. thesis. December 2019. Major: Civil Engineering. Advisor: Paul Capel. ...
The Atmospheric Nitrogen Compounds II: Emissions, Transport, Transformation, Deposition and Assessme...
Author Posting. © The Author(s), 2013. This is the author's version of the work. It is posted here ...