411-4 Comparison of Effects of Biosolids Versus Chemical Fertilizer Application On Nitrate Leaching in a Midwest Soil.

Poster Number 2534

See more from this Division: S11 Soils & Environmental Quality
See more from this Session: S11/S02 Joint Symposium On Beneficial Re-Use of Wastes and Environmental Implications of Waste Recycling: IV
Wednesday, October 24, 2012
Duke Energy Convention Center, Exhibit Hall AB, Level 1
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Guanglong Tian1, Olawale Oladeji1, Albert Cox1, Thomas Granato2 and Catherine O'Connor1, (1)MWRD, Cicero, IL
(2)111 E. Erie St., Metropolitan Water Reclamation District of Greater Chicago, Chicago, IL
Land application of organic materials as a nutrient source for crop production needs to be managed to minimize nitrate (NO3-) leaching to groundwater.  To assess the impact of biosolids application on NO3- leaching, soil samples were taken in 1976 and 2008 from six depths (0-15, 15-30, 30-45, 45-60, 60-75 and 75-90 cm) at a long-term biosolids field experiment established on calcareous mined soil (Mesic Alfic Udarents) located in Fulton County, Illinois.  The experiment included application of four treatments annually from 1973 to 2008:  17, 34, and 68 Mg ha-1 biosolids and 336 kg N ha-1 chemical nitrogen (N) fertilizer.  The biosolids were applied as liquid biosolids from 1973 to 1984 and air-dried biosolids from 1985 to 2008.  Corn was grown annually throughout the study.  At four years of annual application of liquid biosolids, the NO3- concentrations in subsoil depths (15-90 cm) at the lowest rate of biosolids application (17 Mg ha-1), which is equivalent to the agronomic rate, were similar to concentrations in the chemical fertilizer treatment.  Elevated subsoil NO3- concentrations above that in the fertilizer treatment in the samples collected in 1976 were observed only at the highest rate of biosolids application (68 Mg ha-1).  At 36 years of annual application (12 years of liquid biosolids and 24 years of air-dried biosolids), the NO3- concentrations in the 45-90 cm depths were lower in all biosolids plots than in the chemical fertilizer treatment.  The NO3- concentration in the soil profile increased with depths from 15-30 cm to 75-90 cm after long-term use of chemical fertilizer, but this trend did not occur in the biosolids treatments.  The results indicate biosolids-amended soil appear to conserve the excess reactive N as organic N.  Our findings suggest that N leaching with long-term use of biosolids as N fertilizer is lower than with chemical fertilizer.
See more from this Division: S11 Soils & Environmental Quality
See more from this Session: S11/S02 Joint Symposium On Beneficial Re-Use of Wastes and Environmental Implications of Waste Recycling: IV
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