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a USDA-ARS, J. Phil Campbell, Sr. Natural Resource Conservation Center, Watkinsville, GA 30677
b USDA-ARS, Southeast Watershed Research Lab., Tifton, GA 31793
c Univ. of Georgia, Coastal Plain Experiment Station, Tifton, GA 31793
* Corresponding author (dfrankln{at}uga.edu)
Received for publication September 18, 2005. Further studies on the quality of runoff from tillage and cropping systems in the southeastern USA are needed to refine current risk assessment tools for nutrient contamination. Our objective was to quantify and compare effects of constant (Ic) and variable (Iv) rainfall intensity patterns on inorganic nitrogen (N) and phosphorus (P) losses from a Tifton loamy sand (Plinthic Kandiudult) cropped to cotton (Gossypium hirsutum L.) and managed under conventional (CT) or strip-till (ST) systems. We simulated rainfall at a constant intensity and a variable intensity pattern (57 mm h1) and collected runoff continuously at 5-min intervals for 70 min. For cumulative runoff at 50 min, the Iv pattern lost significantly greater amounts (p < 0.05) of total Kjeldahl N (TKN) and P (TKP) (849 g N ha1 and 266 g P ha1 for Iv; 623 g N ha1 and 192 g P ha1 for Ic) than did the Ic pattern. However, at 70 min, no significant differences in total losses were evident for TKN or TKP from either rainfall intensity pattern. In contrast, total cumulative losses of dissolved reactive P (DRP) and NO3N were greatest for ST-Ic, followed by ST-Iv, CT-Ic, and CT-Iv in diminishing order (69 g DRP ha1 and 361 g NO3N ha1; 37 g DRP ha1 and 133 g NO3N ha1; 3 g DRP ha1 and 58 g NO3N ha1; 1 g DRP ha1 and 49 g NO3N ha1). Results indicate that constant-rate rainfall simulations may overestimate the amount of dissolved nutrients lost to the environment in overland flow from cropping systems in loamy sand soils. We also found that CT treatments lost significantly greater amounts of TKN and TKP than ST treatments and in contrast, ST treatments lost significantly greater amounts of DRP and NO3N than CT treatments. These results indicate that ST systems may be losing more soluble fractions than CT systems, but only a fraction the total N (33%) and total P (11%) lost through overland flow from CT systems.
Abbreviations: CT, conventional tillage DRP, dissolved reactive phosphorus Ic, constant rainfall intensity Iv, variable rainfall intensity ST, strip tillage TKN, total Kjeldahl nitrogen TKP, total Kjeldahl phosphorus WSP, water-soluble phosphorus
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