Authors
Leonard C Kibet, Louis S Saporito, Arthur L Allen, Eric B May, Peter JA Kleinman, Fawzy M Hashem, Ray B Bryant
Publication date
2014/4/3
Journal
JoVE (Journal of Visualized Experiments)
Issue
86
Pages
e51664
Description
Rainfall is a driving force for the transport of environmental contaminants from agricultural soils to surficial water bodies via surface runoff. The objective of this study was to characterize the effects of antecedent soil moisture content on the fate and transport of surface applied commercial urea, a common form of nitrogen (N) fertilizer, following a rainfall event that occurs within 24 hr after fertilizer application. Although urea is assumed to be readily hydrolyzed to ammonium and therefore not often available for transport, recent studies suggest that urea can be transported from agricultural soils to coastal waters where it is implicated in harmful algal blooms. A rainfall simulator was used to apply a consistent rate of uniform rainfall across packed soil boxes that had been prewetted to different soil moisture contents. By controlling rainfall and soil physical characteristics, the effects of antecedent soil moisture on urea loss …
Total citations
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Scholar articles
LC Kibet, LS Saporito, AL Allen, EB May, PJA Kleinman… - JoVE (Journal of Visualized Experiments), 2014