Improving crop growing conditions with water treatment residual and compost co‐amendments: Soil–water dynamics

Author:

Stone Wendy12ORCID,Steytler Jan3,de Jager Lurika3,Hardie Ailsa3,Clarke Catherine E.3ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Stellenbosch University Water Institute Stellenbosch South Africa

2. Environmental Microbiology Laboratory, Department of Microbiology Stellenbosch University Stellenbosch South Africa

3. Department of Soil Science Stellenbosch University Stellenbosch South Africa

Abstract

AbstractLand application of water treatment residual (WTR) in combination with phosphate‐rich organic wastes, like compost or sewage sludge, in nutrient‐poor soils was previously shown to promote crop growth. This WTR diversion from landfill to agriculture supports local and international mandates for waste circularity. Although soil–water dynamics—like saturated hydraulic conductivity, water retention, and hydrophobicity—are well‐defined for compost and somewhat defined for WTR (except for hydrophobicity), the impacts of co‐amending sandy soils with both are not well‐defined. In laboratory analyses, co‐amendment had an intermediate effect between individual amendments on the hydrophobic sandy soils, increasing water retention by 27% (WTR and compost both increased water retention), decreasing hydrophobicity by increasing hydraulic conductivity twofold (WTR and compost both decreased hydrophobicity), and having no effect on saturated hydraulic conductivity (decreased by WTR and increased by compost). With two positive effects and one “no effect” on soil–water dynamics in laboratory trials, the co‐amendment was expected to buffer both crop water use efficiency (WUE) and nutrient availability under drought stress, for Swiss chard (Beta vulgaris L. var. cicla), co‐investigated in a multifactorial pot trial. Soil nutrients, particularly phosphate, were shown more critical than soil–water dynamics to improve crop WUE. Thus, co‐amended soils have significantly higher crop biomass and WUE than sandy soils. Phosphate‐rich organic co‐amendment is necessary for crop nutrient sufficiency and thus drought resilience in sandy soils amended with WTR. Thus, pairing wastes to soils for optimum fertility is a critical consideration in waste land application for both biomass and drought resilience.

Funder

Water Research Commission

Publisher

Wiley

Reference59 articles.

1. Compost Amendment to Sandy Soil Affects Soil Properties and Greenhouse Tomato Productivity

2. Water Retention and Hydraulic Conductivity of Cross-Linked Polyacrylamides in Sandy Soils

3. Campbell C. R.(2000).Reference sufficiency ranges for plant analysis in the southern region of the United States(Southern Cooperative Series Bulletin No. 394).North Carolina Department of Agriculture and Consumer Services.www.ncagr.gov/agronomi/saaesd/scsb394.pdf

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