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    | Titel | Temporal variability in phosphorus transfers: classifying concentration–discharge event dynamics |  
    | VerfasserIn | P. Haygarth, B. L. Turner, A. Fraser, S. Jarvis, T. Harrod, D. Nash, D. Halliwell, T. Page, K. Beven  |  
    | Medientyp | Artikel 
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    | Sprache | Englisch 
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    | ISSN | 1027-5606 
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    | Digitales Dokument | URL |  
    | Erschienen | In: Hydrology and Earth System Sciences ; 8, no. 1 ; Nr. 8, no. 1, S.88-97 |  
    | Datensatznummer | 250005387 
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    | Publikation (Nr.) |  copernicus.org/hess-8-88-2004.pdf |  
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        | Zusammenfassung |  
        | The importance of temporal variability in relationships between phosphorus 
        (P) concentration (Cp) and discharge (Q) is linked to a simple means of 
        classifying the circumstances of Cp–Q relationships in terms of functional types 
        of response. New experimental data at the upstream interface of grassland soil and catchment 
        systems at a range of scales (lysimeters to headwaters) in England and Australia are used 
        to demonstrate the potential of such an approach. Three types of event are defined as Types 
        1–3, depending on whether the relative change in Q exceeds the relative change in 
        Cp (Type 1), whether Cp and Q are positively inter-related (Type 2) 
        and whether Cp varies yet Q is unchanged (Type 3). The classification helps to 
        characterise circumstances that can be explained mechanistically in relation to (i) the 
        scale of the study (with a tendency towards Type 1 in small scale lysimeters), (ii) the 
        form of P with a tendency for Type 1 for soluble (i.e., <0.45 μm P forms) and (iii) the 
        sources of P with Type 3 dominant where P availability overrides transport controls. This 
        simple framework provides a basis for development of a more complex and quantitative 
        classification of Cp–Q relationships that can be developed further to 
        contribute to future models of P transfer and delivery from slope to stream. Studies that 
        evaluate the temporal dynamics of the transfer of P are currently grossly 
        under-represented in comparison with models based on static/spatial factors. Keywords: phosphorus, concentration, discharge, lysimeters, temporal dynamics, overland 
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