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1.
J Environ Qual ; 53(3): 365-377, 2024.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38556891

ABSTRACT

Continuous application of dairy manure to soils can lead to excessive phosphorus (P) accumulation (legacy P), which requires understanding for managing nutrient availability and leaching. This study was conducted in Kimberly, ID, where dairy manure or conventional fertilizer was applied to calcareous soil plots under continuous crop rotations for 8 years (2013-2020), followed by 2 years with no amendment. To understand legacy P behavior in the soils, total P, organic/inorganic P, and plant-available Olsen bicarbonate P and Truog extraction measurements were made from surface and subsurface samples. Additionally, P in soluble and less soluble calcium phosphate (Ca-P) minerals was estimated using selective extractions, and P desorption was measured in a flow-through reactor. Manure amendments resulted in increased total soil P and plant-available P, particularly in the initial 5 years. In the 0- to 30-cm depth, 54%-65% of the soil P added from manure amendments was readily soluble by the Truog P test. Phosphorus released from the 2022 manure-amended soil in the desorption experiments was about five times greater than the fertilizer-amended soil, suggesting high leaching potential. After 8 years of manure amendment, subsurface Olsen-P levels exceeded the 40 mg kg-1 management threshold, suggesting P adsorption potential of the surface had become saturated, allowing for P leaching. In the manure-amended surface soils, calcium phosphate minerals increased compared to the controls. Even after 2 years without manure amendment, soluble Ca-P mineral phases persisted in the soils, which can be a long-term source of P leaching.


Subject(s)
Fertilizers , Manure , Phosphorus , Soil , Phosphorus/analysis , Phosphorus/chemistry , Manure/analysis , Soil/chemistry , Fertilizers/analysis , Dairying , Soil Pollutants/analysis , Agriculture/methods , Animals
2.
J Sep Sci ; 33(17-18): 2547-57, 2010 Sep.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-20806238

ABSTRACT

Two HPLC columns packed with superficially porous packing material (Kinetex™ 1.7 and 2.6 µm C18 particles) were evaluated in terms of their physical properties and performance characteristics. These columns were compared to a column packed with a sub-2 µm totally porous material and to a Halo(TM) column packed with 2.7 µm C18 superficially porous packing. The columns packed with superficially porous particles displayed a comparably narrower size distribution, which is narrower than the distribution of the totally porous sub-2 µm particles. Physical characteristics of the Kinetex™ particles were evaluated in terms of surface area, pore diameter, and specific pore volume. Total, external, internal, and shell porosities among the four different columns were evaluated and compared. The specific permeability for the Kinetex™ columns showed values close to those predicted by the Kozeny-Carman equation. All four columns were evaluated in terms of their chromatographic performance and compared using the Knox equation. The columns packed with the 2.6 and 2.7 µm superficially porous materials showed reduced plate heights below 2, whereas the sub-2 µm particles showed values of 2.2 and above.

3.
Bioresour Technol ; 96(3): 323-9, 2005 Feb.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-15474933

ABSTRACT

Increased numbers of swine producers will be removing sludge from their anaerobic waste treatment lagoons in the next few years, due to sludge exceeding designed storage capacity. Information on availability of nitrogen (N) in the sludge is needed to improve application recommendations for crops. The objective of this study was to investigate possible effects of different companies and types of swine operations on the availability of N in sludge from their associated lagoons. A laboratory incubation study was conducted to quantify the availability of N (i.e. initial inorganic N plus the potentially mineralizable organic N) in the sludge. Nine sludge sources from lagoons of sow, nursery and finishing operations of three different swine companies were mixed with a loamy sand soil (200 mg total Kjeldahl N kg(-1) soil) and incubated at a water content of 0.19 g. water g(-1) dry soil and 25+/-2 degrees C for 12 weeks. Samples were taken at eight times over the 12-week period and analyzed for inorganic N (i.e. NH(4)-N and NO(3)-N) to determine mineralization of organic N in the sludge. Company and type of swine operation had no significant effects (P < 0.05) on the pattern of inorganic N accumulation over time. Thus, inorganic N accumulation from all sludge sources was fit to a first order equation [Nt = Ni + No (1-e(-kt)]. This relationship indicated that of the 200 mg of total sludge N added per kg soil, 23.5% was in the form of potentially mineralizable organic N (No) and 17.5% was in the form of inorganic N (Ni). The sum of these two pools (41%) represents an estimate of the proportion of total N in the applied sludge in plant available form after the 12 week incubation. While plant N availability coefficients were not measured in this study, the lack of significant company or type of swine operation effects on sludge N mineralization suggests that use of the same plant N availability coefficient for sludge from different types of lagoons is justifiable. The validity of this interpretation depends on the assumption that variation in other components of different sludge sources such as Cu and Zn does not differentially alter N uptake by the receiver crops.


Subject(s)
Agriculture/methods , Nitrogen/analysis , Sewage/chemistry , Animals , Biological Availability , Linear Models , Models, Chemical , North Carolina , Soil/analysis , Swine , Time Factors
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