Movement of solutes in tropical Alfisols cleared by different methods

Solute movement under saturated water-flow conditions was studied in undisturbed and disturbed soil columns and in the field under four methods of clearing: manual; shear blade; tree pusher; and root rake, and traditional farming. Soil under forest was included as a control. Chloride (Cl−) appeared...

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Detalles Bibliográficos
Autores principales: Ghuman, B.S., Lal, R.
Formato: Journal Article
Lenguaje:Inglés
Publicado: 1987
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://hdl.handle.net/10568/175888
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author Ghuman, B.S.
Lal, R.
author_browse Ghuman, B.S.
Lal, R.
author_facet Ghuman, B.S.
Lal, R.
author_sort Ghuman, B.S.
collection Repository of Agricultural Research Outputs (CGSpace)
description Solute movement under saturated water-flow conditions was studied in undisturbed and disturbed soil columns and in the field under four methods of clearing: manual; shear blade; tree pusher; and root rake, and traditional farming. Soil under forest was included as a control. Chloride (Cl−) appeared in the effluent at 0.1 pore volume after its application to the surface of undisturbed soil columns taken from plots cleared manually, with shear blade, or with tree pusher. In columns fron forest and traditional farming plots, no Cl− appeared in the effluent until 0.2 pore volume of solution had passed through the columns. The pore volume required to attain 0.5 relative Cl− concentration was 0.60, 0.60, 0.40, 0.40, and 0.26 for the columns from forest control, traditional farming, shear-blade, tree-pusher and manually cleared plots, respectively. This indicates preferential water flow in the columns from manually cleared plots as compared to others. Nitrate leaching in the undisturbed columns was nearly identical to chloride. Phosphorus appeared in the effluent after the passage of 0.34 pore volume of solution through the columns of forest control and manually cleared treatments, and of 0.7 pore volume in the shear blade treatment. The increase in the relative phosphate concentration was considerably slower than chloride and nitrate. Chloride appeared later in the repacked columns than in the undisturbed columns, indicating the absence of preferential flow pathways in the disturbed columns. In the field, less than 100% Cl− and water were retained in the 0–70 cm depth, indicating some flow of chloride solution to below 70 cm depth.
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spelling CGSpace1758882025-11-11T10:12:18Z Movement of solutes in tropical Alfisols cleared by different methods Ghuman, B.S. Lal, R. alfisol soil columns Solute movement under saturated water-flow conditions was studied in undisturbed and disturbed soil columns and in the field under four methods of clearing: manual; shear blade; tree pusher; and root rake, and traditional farming. Soil under forest was included as a control. Chloride (Cl−) appeared in the effluent at 0.1 pore volume after its application to the surface of undisturbed soil columns taken from plots cleared manually, with shear blade, or with tree pusher. In columns fron forest and traditional farming plots, no Cl− appeared in the effluent until 0.2 pore volume of solution had passed through the columns. The pore volume required to attain 0.5 relative Cl− concentration was 0.60, 0.60, 0.40, 0.40, and 0.26 for the columns from forest control, traditional farming, shear-blade, tree-pusher and manually cleared plots, respectively. This indicates preferential water flow in the columns from manually cleared plots as compared to others. Nitrate leaching in the undisturbed columns was nearly identical to chloride. Phosphorus appeared in the effluent after the passage of 0.34 pore volume of solution through the columns of forest control and manually cleared treatments, and of 0.7 pore volume in the shear blade treatment. The increase in the relative phosphate concentration was considerably slower than chloride and nitrate. Chloride appeared later in the repacked columns than in the undisturbed columns, indicating the absence of preferential flow pathways in the disturbed columns. In the field, less than 100% Cl− and water were retained in the 0–70 cm depth, indicating some flow of chloride solution to below 70 cm depth. 1987 2025-07-30T10:27:06Z 2025-07-30T10:27:06Z Journal Article https://hdl.handle.net/10568/175888 en Limited Access application/pdf Ghuman, B.S., & Lal, R. (1987). Movement of solutes in tropical alfisols cleared by different methods. Field Crops Research, 16(4), 285-296.
spellingShingle alfisol
soil
columns
Ghuman, B.S.
Lal, R.
Movement of solutes in tropical Alfisols cleared by different methods
title Movement of solutes in tropical Alfisols cleared by different methods
title_full Movement of solutes in tropical Alfisols cleared by different methods
title_fullStr Movement of solutes in tropical Alfisols cleared by different methods
title_full_unstemmed Movement of solutes in tropical Alfisols cleared by different methods
title_short Movement of solutes in tropical Alfisols cleared by different methods
title_sort movement of solutes in tropical alfisols cleared by different methods
topic alfisol
soil
columns
url https://hdl.handle.net/10568/175888
work_keys_str_mv AT ghumanbs movementofsolutesintropicalalfisolsclearedbydifferentmethods
AT lalr movementofsolutesintropicalalfisolsclearedbydifferentmethods