An indoor freeze/thaw lysimeter study of phosphorus leaching from soils with four catch crops

Catch crops have been found to decrease leaching of nitrates into surface and ground waters, but they also have the potential to increase phosphorus (P) loadings to natural waters as well, due to plant cell destruction caused during natural freezing and thawing events. An indoor lysimeter experiment...

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Detalles Bibliográficos
Autor principal: Riddle, Matthew
Formato: Second cycle, A2E
Lenguaje:sueco
Inglés
Publicado: 2011
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://stud.epsilon.slu.se/2763/
Descripción
Sumario:Catch crops have been found to decrease leaching of nitrates into surface and ground waters, but they also have the potential to increase phosphorus (P) loadings to natural waters as well, due to plant cell destruction caused during natural freezing and thawing events. An indoor lysimeter experiment was carried out using a clay and a sand soil with the application of four different plant species: perennial ryegrass cultivar ‘Helmer’ (Lolium perenne L.), honey herb, cultivar ‘Stala’ (Phacelia tanacetifolia L.), chicory, cultivar ‘Puna’ (Cichoium intybis L.), and oilseed radish, cultivar ‘Adios’ (Raphanus sativus L.). These plants were exposed to four simulated rainfall and three freezing events in two separate experiments, one using topsoil monoliths with applied plant material and one with plant material only. Sand and clay soils had significantly different leaching loads after 1 and 2 freezing events with total P contents in leachate equivalent to 0.71 kg ha‐1 for clay and 0.20 kg ha‐1 (P=0.0018) for sand soil, and after the second event 0.54 kg ha‐1 for clay and 0.30 kg ha‐1 for sand (P=0.0026). The combined total P leaching loads from the clay soil were significant for many of the plants and were in the order of chicory (2.6 kg ha‐1) > ryegrass (2.3 kg ha‐1) > oilseed radish (2.2 kg ha‐1) > honey herb (1.3kgha‐1), taken from the plant and soil experiment. Losses were of a magnitude greater from the plant only experiment with chicory (51.7 kg ha‐1) > oilseed radish (43.2kgha‐1) > honey herb (18.4 kg ha‐1) > ryegrass (10 kg ha‐1). A total P analysis of plant tissue from before the first lysimeter experiment and after the second plant only experiment showed that chicory lost 84%, oilseed radish 76%, ryegrass 74% and honey herb 39% of total initial biomass P. The results indicate that soil texture and plant choice can have a large impact on leaching loads that could potentially enter natural waters.