Title of article :
N and P leaching and microbial contamination from intensively managed pasture and cut sward on sandy soil in Finland
Author/Authors :
K. Saarij?rvi، نويسنده , , P. Virkaj?rvi، نويسنده , , H. Heinonen-Tanski، نويسنده , , I. Taipalinen، نويسنده ,
Issue Information :
روزنامه با شماره پیاپی سال 2004
Abstract :
The aim of this study was to find out if nutrient leaching from grassland represents a threat to groundwater in areas that are subject to freezing and extensive snow cover. The effects of grazing and cutting on groundwater quality were compared using field lysimeters during a 3-year experiment at North Savo Research Station (63°10′N, 27°18′E), Finland. One-third of the annual precipitation at this site (578 mm per year) falls as snow. Snowmelt produces over 100 mm of water flow and there is a substantial risk of nutrient leaching. The soil at the site was a medium textured Dystric Regosol, consisting mainly of fine sand. The lysimeters used in this study were 100 m2 and 1.8 m deep, suitable for grazing studies. The watering point for cows was located on one of the lysimeters. The area was fertilized with N at 220 kg ha−1 per year. After two summers of grazing and cutting the area was treated with glyphosate and in the following spring it was ploughed and resown to grass. The NO3-N concentrations were low and there were no differences among treatments during the first 2 years of the trial. After glyphosate application nitrate leaching increased and the average concentrations of NO3-N from cut, grazed and watering point lysimeters were 3.4, 10.2 and 21.8 mg l−1, respectively. The amounts of leached NO3-N after glyphosate treatment were 10, 43 and 139 kg ha−1 per year, respectively. Phosphorus leaching was negligible. In the first year the numbers of heterotrophic micro-organisms in leachate from grazed and cut lysimeters were similar. In the second year leachate from grazed lysimeters contained more heterotrophic micro-organisms than that from cut plots (geometric means 44 000 and 4600 CFU ml−1, respectively). Moreover, the leachate from the grazed plots and the watering point occasionally contained low numbers of enteric micro-organisms, faecal coliforms and tyrobutyricum clostridia. The study indicated that cutting and grazing did not represent a risk to groundwater quality during grass cover years, but renovation of pasture caused a significant N leaching to groundwater.
Keywords :
Leaching , Nitrate , Phosphorus , Water quality , Finland , Sandy soil , Grazing , Grassland
Journal title :
Agriculture Ecosystems and Environment
Journal title :
Agriculture Ecosystems and Environment