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Maintaining intensive agriculture overlying aquifers using the threshold nitrate root-uptake phenomenon
Year:
2021
Source of publication :
Journal of Environmental Quality
Authors :
Bar-Tal, Asher
;
.
Kanner, Beeri
;
.
Kurtzman, Daniel
;
.
Levy, Yehuda
;
.
Nitsan, Ido
;
.
Volume :
Co-Authors:
Facilitators :
From page:
0
To page:
0
(
Total pages:
1
)
Abstract:

Reducing nitrate leaching from agricultural land to aquifers is a high priority concern for more than a half a century. This study presents theory and observations of a threshold concentration of nitrate in the root zone (Cmax), which the leachate concentration increases at higher rates with increasing root-zone nitrate concentration. Cmax is derived both by direct results from container experiments with varying nitrogen (N) fertigation, and as a calibration parameter in N-transport models beneath commercial agricultural plots. For 5 different crops, Cmax ranged between 20-45 mg/l of NO3 -N derived from experiments and models. However, for lettuce, which was irrigated with a large leaching fraction, Cmax could not be defined. In crops irrigated and fertilized in the warm/dry season (corn and citrus), the experiments show a dramatic change in leachate-concentration slope, and simulations reveal a wide range of sensitivity of leachate NO3 -N concentration to Cmax. In annual crops irrigated and fertilized in the cool/wet season (e.g., potato in a Mediterranean climate), the experiments show a distinct Cmax that is less dramatic than that of the summer-irrigated crops in the container experiment, and smaller impact of Cmax in N-transport models. The simulations show that, for summer-irrigated crops, maintaining fertigation at C < Cmax has a significant effect reducing deep leachate concentrations, whereas for the winter annual crops the simulations revealed no threshold effect. It is suggested that for summer-irrigated crops, fertigation below Cmax robustly serves the co-sustainability of intensive agriculture and aquifer water quality; this is also suggested for winter crops, but benefits are not robust. For short season, small root-system crops (e.g., lettuce), efforts should be made to detach the crop from the soil. 

Note:
Related Files :
Container experiments
Nitrate leaching
nitrogen-transport modelling
nitrogen fertilization
Root uptake
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More details
DOI :
10.1002/jeq2.20239
Article number:
0
Affiliations:
Database:
PubMed
Publication Type:
article
;
.
Language:
English
Editors' remarks:
ID:
54998
Last updated date:
02/03/2022 17:27
Creation date:
18/05/2021 19:50
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Scientific Publication
Maintaining intensive agriculture overlying aquifers using the threshold nitrate root-uptake phenomenon
Maintaining intensive agriculture overlying aquifers using the threshold nitrate root-uptake phenomenon

Reducing nitrate leaching from agricultural land to aquifers is a high priority concern for more than a half a century. This study presents theory and observations of a threshold concentration of nitrate in the root zone (Cmax), which the leachate concentration increases at higher rates with increasing root-zone nitrate concentration. Cmax is derived both by direct results from container experiments with varying nitrogen (N) fertigation, and as a calibration parameter in N-transport models beneath commercial agricultural plots. For 5 different crops, Cmax ranged between 20-45 mg/l of NO3 -N derived from experiments and models. However, for lettuce, which was irrigated with a large leaching fraction, Cmax could not be defined. In crops irrigated and fertilized in the warm/dry season (corn and citrus), the experiments show a dramatic change in leachate-concentration slope, and simulations reveal a wide range of sensitivity of leachate NO3 -N concentration to Cmax. In annual crops irrigated and fertilized in the cool/wet season (e.g., potato in a Mediterranean climate), the experiments show a distinct Cmax that is less dramatic than that of the summer-irrigated crops in the container experiment, and smaller impact of Cmax in N-transport models. The simulations show that, for summer-irrigated crops, maintaining fertigation at C < Cmax has a significant effect reducing deep leachate concentrations, whereas for the winter annual crops the simulations revealed no threshold effect. It is suggested that for summer-irrigated crops, fertigation below Cmax robustly serves the co-sustainability of intensive agriculture and aquifer water quality; this is also suggested for winter crops, but benefits are not robust. For short season, small root-system crops (e.g., lettuce), efforts should be made to detach the crop from the soil. 

Scientific Publication
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