The Olsen P method as an agronomic and environmental test for predicting phosphate release from acid soils
Torrent, J.
2007
Phosphorus losses to surface runoff waters after application of digestate to a soil over fertilised with phosphorus.
Type
article
Creator
Publisher
Identifier
MONTEIRO, M.C.H.; CARNEIRO, J.P. (2021) - Phosphorus losses to surface runoff waters after application of digestate to a soil over fertilised with phosphorus. ISSN 1567-7230. 232:439. 12 p..
1567-7230
10.1007/s11270-021-05382-y
Title
Phosphorus losses to surface runoff waters after application of digestate to a soil over fertilised with phosphorus.
Subject
Anaerobic digestate
Eutrophication
Organic fertilisation
Soil legacy phosphorus
Water quality
Eutrophication
Organic fertilisation
Soil legacy phosphorus
Water quality
Date
2021-11-29T15:18:36Z
2021-11-29T15:18:36Z
2021
2021-11-29T15:18:36Z
2021
Description
Anaerobic digestates from biogas plants can be used as agricultural fertilisers providing recycling nitrogen (N) and other nutrients for crop needs. It is still unclear the impact on phosphorus (P) losses to runoff waters of digestates as sources of N instead of inorganic N fertilisers in over fertilised soils with P. A field experiment was done in a sandy and acidic soil high in P. The experimental design was completely randomised with five treatments. The inorganic N fertilisation (90 kg ha−1) was done in four treatments, those with past P inputs of the following: (i) inorganic N and P fertilisers (Ni/MF), (ii) organic amendments (pig or duck dry slurry-Ni/PS and Ni/DS or cattle manure compost-Ni/CM). Digestate was applied in plots with past P input of cattle slurry (DG/CS) providing also 90 kg N ha−1. Ryegrass was sowed as cover crop. The concentration of total dissolved P in runoff waters was high in all treatments and ranged between 0.5 (Ni/PS) and 2.6 mg L−1 (DG/CS). These runoff waters pose a risk of non-source P pollution for fresh waters. In soils with low P sorption capacity and over fertilised with P, the fertilisation with anaerobic digestate as the only source of N to crops increased the risk of P losses to runoff waters compared with inorganic N fertilisation. Therefore, the amount of digestate applied to soil must be calculated considering its N:P ratio in order to not exceed the crop P requirement.
info:eu-repo/semantics/publishedVersion
info:eu-repo/semantics/publishedVersion
Access restrictions
openAccess
http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/
http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/
Language
eng
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