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Real-time consequences of riparian cattle trampling for mobilization of sediment, nutrients and bacteria in a British lowland river

Author(s): Mark Everard; Jennifer L. Wilson

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Keywords: Cattle trampling; Water quality; Turbidity; Faecal coliforms; Soluble reactive phosphorus; Buffer zone

Abstract: Rivers and their catchments support multiple human needs, necessitating integrated management of land and water resources. Agricultural land use, specifically the impacts of riparian cattle trampling, potentially significantly contributes to damage to river systems. This study addresses a knowledge gap stemming from the paucity of prior research correlating generation of pollutants with cattle activity locally and in ‘real time’. Turbidity, soluble reactive phosphorus and faecal coliforms were analysed at upstream control and downstream impact sites correlated with cattle activity over a 65 m river margin throughout a two-month summer period. Riparian cattle trampling impacted water quality, specifically turbidity and faecal coliform levels. Average turbidity increased by more than 90% between upstream and downstream sites during cattle activity, whilst average faecal coliform counts almost doubled. Findings for phosphorus concentrations were less conclusive, perhaps due to filtration of suspended sediment-bound phosphorus prior to analysis. Illustrative cost–benefit assessment of potential buffer zone installation to exclude cattle from the river margin at the study site, based on values transferred from a relevant published study, found that investment in a buffer zone would achieve a benefit-to-cost ratio of approximately 38:1 with a distribution of broad societal benefits to the farmer, local people and wider publics.

DOI: https://doi.org/10.1080/15715124.2017.1402778

Year: 2018

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