Investigating the of Water treatment residuals on Phosphorus mobility derived from biosolid application to Willow coppice


Autoria(s): Cairns, Michael; McCracken, Alistair; Doody, Donnacha; Flynn, Raymond
Data(s)

21/11/2012

Resumo

Short rotation willow coppice (SRWC) treatment of biosolids is limited by the oversupply of biosolid derived phosphorus; this can lead to eventual losses of phosphorus to water. Water treatment residuals (WTR), a by-product of potable water treatment, have been identified as a viable soil amendment for mitigation of phosphorus loss. WTR exploit the capacity of internally held aluminium oxide-hydroxide complexes to immobilise labile phosphorus. However indiscriminate additions to plots can result in inadequate control or excessive immobilization of soluble P, leading to crop deficiencies. Four commercially grown common willow (Salix) genotypes (Terra Nova, Endeavour, Resolution and Tora) were grown in soil amended with WTR at five different application rates (0, 10, 25, 50 and 100 tonne ha-1 air-dry basis) in a glasshouse pot experiment. The effects of application rates on plant yields, tissue P concentrations, P uptake and soil labile P availability were measured. Results indicate labile P was reduced with increasing WTR application rates, without any negative agronomic impacts.

Identificador

http://pure.qub.ac.uk/portal/en/publications/investigating-the-of-water-treatment-residuals-on-phosphorus-mobility-derived-from-biosolid-application-to-willow-coppice(c4c82aec-7b61-47aa-aa18-4a5a4635e248).html

Idioma(s)

eng

Direitos

info:eu-repo/semantics/restrictedAccess

Fonte

Cairns , M , McCracken , A , Doody , D & Flynn , R 2012 , ' Investigating the of Water treatment residuals on Phosphorus mobility derived from biosolid application to Willow coppice ' 17th Biosolids and organic resources conference , Leeds , United Kingdom , 19/11/2012 - 21/11/2012 , .

Tipo

conferenceObject