Fig. 4 A filter device as an end-of-pipe solution for the removal of phosphorus from tile drainage water. The filter barrel is equipped with iron-coated sand, which has been found suitable for phosphorus adsorption and which is a by-product of the drinking water industry<\/figcaption><\/figure>\nAre our water resources haunted by the past or the future?<\/h3>\n
River basin scale investigations show that sub-catchments that are dominated by crop production supply significantly more nutrients to the river than those under forest and grassland (Bauwe et al.,2019c). Landscapes with long-term crop production have been enriched with nutrients for decades. Any changes in land management will probably take similar times to become detectible in water quality. The strong affinity of phosphorus to inorganic and organic fine particles causes long residence times in soils and sediments and, therefore, prolonged leaching to the sea. This observation has been named \u2018legacy effect\u2019 and was first described for phosphorus. Currently, however, we are aware that a similar effect is to be expected for nitrogen. Nitrogen was transported to the Gulf of Mexico for decades even with hypothesized radical land management changes (Meter et al., 2016).<\/p>\n
We should be aware of our past non-equilibrated management of nutrients in agricultural production. A glimpse into the future might even make us worry more. Global climate change and the projections of rainfall and temperature indicate a more Mediterranean-like climate for northern Europe and the UK. Mediterranean in this context means dryer summers with occasional high-intensity rainfall events and wetter winters with higher drainage volumes, both of which foster higher nutrient loadings of our rivers. It shall be emphasised that the sometimes controversial topic of climate change is not necessarily a gradual process with hardly tangible changes from one year to another. As experienced in 2018, 2019, and spring 2020, annual rainfall distribution is dramatically shifting from the long-term average patterns. All our efforts in revising fertiliser regulations shall consider legacy and climate change effects.<\/p>\n
What can we do now to immediately improve water quality?<\/h3>\n
It should be stressed that we cannot only blame farmers for being responsible for an impaired water quality. Farmers are acting according to political and legislative boundary conditions. We need revised incentive schemes, which foster a socially and environmentally fair agriculture. A drastically modified management strategy with 50% less fertiliser input will disproportionally reduce nutrient concentrations in rivers as a recent modelling study could prove (Bauwe et al., 2019c). However, water quality will improve delayed and nitrogen, as well as phosphorus, will continue to leach for decades because of high nutrient stocks in soils and sediments.<\/p>\n
So, there is nothing to be done about it? Not quite. In addition to a revised land management and a limited application of fertilisers to soils, so-called \u2018water-based\u2019 or \u2018end-of-pipe\u2019 solutions have come into focus for water quality improvements. The idea behind several newly developed techniques is to clean up contaminated water before it reaches rivers and eventually the ocean. This is, of course, only an option for landscape settings where agricultural runoff can be captured and treated. In this context, agricultural tile drainage systems, in which the soil access water is routed to ditches and brooks, offer excellent opportunities for water treatment.<\/p>\n
Various filter systems and reactive barriers have been tested with varying success. In a more recent study, iron-coated sand has been analysed as an adsorbent for phosphorus (Bauwe et al., 2019b). A phosphorus retention device was installed at the outlet of a drainage pipe (see Fig. 4). Total phosphorus loads could be reduced by 20%, although the phosphorus concentration level was low. In general, these filter systems work best at high concentration input and low hydraulic loading (Bauwe et al., 2019b).<\/p>\n
It is still to be seen if water-based clean up techniques will be established on a large scale. Denmark, for instance, has launched a nation-wide project with thousands of constructed wetlands to be installed. Until today, installations have been tested over short investigation times. Long-term monitoring studies confirming the general suitability of end-of-pipe solutions at field scale are still lacking.<\/p>\n