Back to Search Start Over

Summer Fertigation of Dairy Slurry Reduces Soil Nitrate Concentrations and Subsurface Drainage Nitrate Losses Compared to Fall Injection

Authors :
Sharon K. Papiernik
Chris D. Wente
John M. Baker
Gary W. Feyereisen
Joshua D. Gamble
Source :
Frontiers in Sustainable Food Systems. 2
Publication Year :
2018
Publisher :
Frontiers Media SA, 2018.

Abstract

Leaching of nitrate (NO3-N) from manure-applied cropping systems can represent a substantial N-loss to the environment for dairy farms, particularly in fields with artificial subsurface drainage. In this on-farm study, we used a Before/After analysis to assess the effectiveness of summer fertigation with reduced manure rates (years 2010 – 2015) versus fall injection (2007 – 2009) of dairy slurry in terms of subsequent corn silage yield, corn N removal, soil NO3-N distribution, and NO3-N losses in subsurface tile drainage from a 65-ha field in Minnesota, USA. Yield was similar between periods (average of 18.8 Mg ha-1), but crop %N, N removal, and manurial N-use efficiency were 15, 12, and 126% greater during the fertigation than injection period. Fertigation reduced spring soil NO3-N concentrations to 60-cm depth by an average of 53% relative to injection, except in the 15 to 30 cm increment, where no difference was found. Similarly, fall soil NO3-N concentrations from 30 to 90 cm were 48% lower, on average, under fertigation than injection. Weekly flow-weighted mean NO3-N concentration in tile drainage was lower during fertigation (47.7 mg L-1) than injection (56.8 mg L-1), although mean weekly drainage depth was greater during fertigation (2.3 versus 1.1 mm). This resulted in similar weekly loads between periods (mean of 0.96 kg NO3-N ha-1). For non-snowmelt flow, relationships between drainage and NO3-N load showed log–log slopes of near 1.0 for injection and 0.97 for fertigation, indicating dilution of concentrations with increased flow during fertigation, but not during injection. Differing intercepts indicated a treatment effect of fertigation independent of flow effects, and corresponded to loads of 5.9 kg NO3-N ha-1 for injection and 4.7 kg NO3-N ha-1 for fertigation, a reduction of 20% at a 10 mm weekly flow depth. The magnitude of the reduction in load increased to 22% at a 25 mm weekly flow depth. Results suggest that summer fertigation with attendant reduction in application rate is a viable method for reducing drainage NO3-N losses without impacting yield of irrigated silage corn in the U.S. Midwest.

Details

ISSN :
2571581X
Volume :
2
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Frontiers in Sustainable Food Systems
Accession number :
edsair.doi...........9b53e6841badb849d5318235ac630440
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.3389/fsufs.2018.00015