Selenium in Agricultural Drainage: Essential Nutrient or Toxic Threat?
Publication: Journal of Irrigation and Drainage Engineering
Volume 115, Issue 1
Abstract
The essential nutrient selenium is believed responsible for numerous deformities, reproductive failures, and deaths of migratory birds at Kesterson Reservoir in California's San Joaquin Valley. Wildlife problems at the reservoir appeared only a few years after the area began receiving selenium‐laden subsurface drainage water from less than 42,000 acre (17,000 ha) of irrigated agricultural land on the west side of the valley. Although substantially reduced in acreage from their historic extent, the valley's wetland habitats continue to satisfy the wintering and migratory needs of substantial populations of Pacific Flyway migratory birds. Remnant anadromous fish populations struggle to survive the inadequate flows and low water quality of the valley's riverine habitats. It is estimated that in order to sustain intensively managed, irrigated agriculture and associated high levels of crop production, more than 1,000,000 acre (405,000 ha) of land on the west side of the valley must eventually be drained. Unless extraordinary measures are taken, the potential is great for contaminated agricultural drainage to further harm fish and wildlife resources of the San Joaquin Valley.
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Copyright © 1989 ASCE.
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Published online: Feb 1, 1989
Published in print: Feb 1989
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