Monitoring of nitrate leaching during flush flooding events in a coarse-textured floodplain soil

Salazar, O; Vargas, J; Nájera F.; Seguel, O.; Casanova, M

Keywords: Nonpoint source pollution; Sampling methods; Saturated hydraulic conductivity; Water quality

Abstract

The demand for foods in central Chile is increasing and arable land is expanding rapidly onto floodplain soils, which are being cleared for maize cultivation. After harvest, a significant amount of residual nitrogen (N) may be still present in the soil in autumn-winter, when a high risk of nitrate leaching (NL) is expected due to occasional flooding events. Determining nitrate (NO3-) movement through the vadose zone is essential for studying the impact of agricultural practices on surface water quality. This study focused on understanding the processes of NO3- leaching in a floodplain environment and compared the effectiveness of four different methods: soil coring (TO), an observation well (T1), ceramic suction cup lysimeters (T2) and a capillary lysimeter (FullStop (TM) wetting front detector) (T3) for monitoring NL using an infiltration cylinder to simulate the conditions generated during flush flooding events during autumn-winter season in a typical coarse-textured alluvial floodplain soil. The comparison showed that TO and T3 can be used for monitoring NL during flush flooding events during autumn-winter season in stratified coarse-textured floodplain soils, whereas T1 and T2 are not appropriate for these site conditions. A correlation was found between NO3 and soluble salt (Cl- concentration and EC) only in the first measurements after the dry summer period. The results of this study suggest that most of the surplus N could be leached by excessive irrigation during the crop growing season (spring-summer), while a lower amount of residual N may still be present in the soil in autumn-winter available to be lost by NL during flush flooding events. Overall the two monitored flushing events could have leached around 6% of the total NO3-N load. There was no significant effect of sampler devices on saturated hydraulic conductivity. (C) 2014 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.

Más información

Título según WOS: Monitoring of nitrate leaching during flush flooding events in a coarse-textured floodplain soil
Título según SCOPUS: Monitoring of nitrate leaching during flush flooding events in a coarse-textured floodplain soil
Título de la Revista: AGRICULTURAL WATER MANAGEMENT
Volumen: 146
Editorial: ELSEVIER SCIENCE BV
Fecha de publicación: 2014
Página de inicio: 218
Página final: 227
Idioma: English
DOI:

10.1016/j.agwat.2014.08.014

Notas: ISI, SCOPUS