Authors
Faruk Djodjic, Lars Bergström, Barbro Ulen, Adel Shirmohammadi
Publication date
1999/7
Source
Journal of Environmental Quality
Volume
28
Issue
4
Pages
1273-1282
Publisher
American Society of Agronomy, Crop Science Society of America, and Soil Science Society of America
Description
Phosphorus (P) is the limiting nutrient for primary production in most freshwater ecosystems. The magnitude of P leaching from agricultural soils is therefore critical. Preferential flow has been proposed as a major cause for high P losses in structured clay soils. Undisturbed soil of two texturally different soils, that is, a day soil in which preferential flow was expected to be the main mode of water transport and a sandy soil where piston flow is the dominant process, were used in this study. Use of labeled P made it possible to determine the origin of leached P. An equivalent of 100 kg P ha−1, labeled with 33P, was added to the soil surface of each lysimeter. Water equivalents to 100 mm were added on five occasions with 7 d between each watering event. Ponded flow conditions were established during periods when water was added, to trigger preferential Bow behavior. Phosphorus leaching loads from day columns …
Total citations
1999200020012002200320042005200620072008200920102011201220132014201520162017201820192020202120222023202412377813397836646939561534