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Unidad de Suelos y Riegos, Centro de Investigación y Tecnología Agroalimentaria de Aragón Apdo. 727, 50080-Zaragoza, Spain
* Corresponding author (dquilez{at}aragon.es)
Received for publication July 10, 2003. Land application of animal manures, such as pig slurry (PS), is a common practice in intensive-farming agriculture. However, this practice has a pitfall consisting of the loss of nutrients, in particular nitrate, toward water courses. The objective of this study was to evaluate nitrate leaching for three application rates of pig slurry (50, 100, and 200 Mg ha1) and a control treatment of mineral fertilizer (275 kg N ha1) applied to corn grown in 10 drainage lysimeters. The effects of two irrigation regimes (low vs. high irrigation efficiency) were also analyzed. In the first two irrigation events, drainage NO3N concentrations as high as 145 and 69 mg L1 were measured in the high and moderate PS rate treatments, respectively, in the low irrigation efficiency treatments. This indicates the fast transformation of the PS ammonium into nitrate and the subsequent leaching of the transformed nitrate. Drainage NO3N concentration and load increased linearly by 0.69 mg NO3N L1 and 4.6 kg NO3N ha1, respectively, for each 10 kg N ha1 applied over the minimum of 275 kg N ha1. An increase in irrigation efficiency did not induce a significant increase of leachate concentration and the amount of nitrate leached decreased about 65%. Application of low PS doses before sowing complemented with sidedressing N application and a good irrigation management are the key factors to reduce nitrate contamination of water courses.
Abbreviations: LF, leaching fraction, PS, pig slurry
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