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Leaching of Nitrate,Ammonium, and Phosphate From Compost Amended Soil Columns
Authors:YC Li  PJ Stoffella  AK Alva  DV Calvert  DA Graetz
Institution:1. University of Florida, IFAS, Tropical Research and Education Center, Homestead, Florida;2. University of Florida, IFAS, Indian River Research and Education Center, Fort Pierce, Florida;3. University of Florida, IFAS, Citrus Research and Education Center, Lake Alfred, Florida;4. University of Florida, IFAS, Department of Soil and Water Science, Gainesville, Florida
Abstract:Compost amendment to agricultural soils has been reported to reduce disease incidence, conserve soil moisture, control weeds, or improve soil fertility. Application rate and placement of compost largely depends on the proposed beneficial effects and the rate may vary from 25 to 250 Mg ha?1 (N content up to 4 percent). Application of high rates of compost with high N or P levels may result in excessive leaching of nitrate, ammonium, and phosphate into the groundwater. Leaching could be a serious concern on the east coast of Florida with its inherent high annual rainfall, sandy soils and shallow water table. In this study, five composts (sugarcane filtercake, biosolids, and mixtures of municipal solid wastes and biosolids) were applied on the surface of an Oldsmar sand soil (in 7.5 cm diameter leaching columns) at 100 Mg ha?1 rate and leached with deionized water (300 ml day?1, for five days; equivalent to 34 cm rainfall). The concentrations of NO3-N, NH4-N, and PO4-P in leachate reached as high as 246, 29, and 7 mg L?1, respectively. The amount of N and P leached accounted for 3.3-15.8 percent of total N and 0.2-2.8 percent of total P in the compost. The leaching peaks of NO3-N occurred following the application of only 300-400 ml water (equivalent to 6.8-9.1 cm rainfall).
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