Phosphorus release from intact soil monoliths of manure-amended fields under simulated snowmelt flooding.
Angela ConcepcionDarshani KumaragamageWole AkinremiSaman DharmakeerthiDoug GoltzSrimathie IndraratnePublished in: Journal of environmental quality (2020)
Anaerobic conditions developed in soils with flooding can enhance the release of soil P to overlying water, but little information is available for soils with a long history of manure application. We examined the P release from manure-amended soils under simulated snowmelt flooding. Intact monoliths from manured (solid swine manure [SSM] or liquid swine manure [LSM]) and unamended (control) field plots were collected from Carman, Manitoba. Monoliths were frozen for 7 d, thawed, flooded, and incubated at 4 ± 1 °C. Redox potential, pH, and concentrations of dissolved reactive P (DRP), Ca, Mg, Fe, and Mn in pore water and floodwater were determined weekly up to 56 d after flooding (DAF) and at 84 DAF. Redox potential decreased with DAF with a greater and more rapid decrease in SSM (from ∼300 to <0 mV by 84 DAF) compared with LSM and control (∼100 mV by 84 DAF). Pore water and floodwater DRP concentrations were significantly greater in manured treatments than in the control at all DAFs and in SSM than in LSM for most DAF. Whereas floodwater DRP concentrations remained relatively stable in the control treatment, concentrations in manured treatments increased substantially from the onset of flooding to 35-42 DAF (threefold to fourfold increase) and remained relatively stable thereafter. Significantly greater P release from SSM- than from LSM-treated monoliths was due to greater input of P and the higher organic matter content in SSM-treated soils. These favored the rapid development of anaerobic conditions that further induced P release.