New phosphorus losses via tile drainage depend on fertilizer form, placement, and timing

Author:

Osterholz William1ORCID,Simpson Zach2ORCID,Williams Mark3ORCID,Shedekar Vinayak4,Penn Chad3,King Kevin1ORCID

Affiliation:

1. USDA‐ARS Soil Drainage Research Unit Columbus Ohio USA

2. USDA‐ARS Sustainable Water Management Research Stoneville Mississippi USA

3. USDA‐ARS National Soil Erosion Laboratory West Lafayette Indiana USA

4. Department of Food, Agricultural, and Biological Engineering The Ohio State University Columbus Ohio USA

Abstract

AbstractAgricultural phosphorus (P) losses are harmful to water quality, but knowledge gaps about the importance of fertilizer management practices on new (recently applied) sources of P may limit P loss mitigation efforts. Weighted regression models applied to subsurface tile drainage water quality data enabled estimating the new P losses associated with 155 P applications in Ohio and Indiana, USA. Daily discharge and dissolved reactive P (DRP) and total P (TP) loads were used to detect increases in P loss following each application which was considered new P. The magnitude of new P losses was small relative to fertilizer application rates, averaging 79.3 g DRP ha−1 and 96.1 g TP ha−1, or <3% of P applied. The eight largest new P losses surpassed 330 g DRP ha−1 or 575 g TP ha−1. New P loss mitigation strategies should focus on broadcast liquid manure applications; on average, manure applications caused greater new P losses than inorganic fertilizers, and surface broadcast applications were associated with greater new P losses than injected or incorporated applications. Late fall applications risked having large new P losses applications. On an annual basis, new P contributed an average of 14% of DRP and 5% of TP losses from tile drains, which is much less than previous studies that included surface runoff, suggesting that tile drainage is relatively buffered with regard to new P losses. Therefore old (preexisting soil P) P sources dominated tile drain P losses, and P loss reduction efforts will need to address this source.

Funder

Natural Resources Conservation Service

Publisher

Wiley

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