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Dep. of Soil and Crop Sci., Colorado State Univ., Fort Collins, CO, 80523-1170
* Corresponding author (ken.barbarick{at}colostate.edu)
Received for publication August 1, 2006.
Biosolids beneficial-use programs effectively recycle plant nutrients when these waste materials are applied at an agronomic rate. Plant-nutrient availability questions have arisen relating to Littleton and Englewood (L/E), Colorado Wastewater Treatment Plant biosolids applications to dryland wheat (Triticum aestivum L.)fallow agroecosystems. What is the long-term estimated nitrogen equivalency (NE) of the biosolids? Can we estimate long-term micronutrient distribution with continuous biosolids application? How does plant-nutrient availability change with continuous application? Before each growing season we added biosolids at rates of 0 to 11.2 dry Mg ha1 to plots arranged in randomized complete blocks with four replications per treatment. We found 12 years of application (6 applications to two sites in a 2-yr wheatfallow rotation) produced N equivalencies, based on wheat-grain N uptake, of about 9 kg N Mg1 biosolids. Estimated first-year mineralization rates were
21 to 33%. Since P, Cu, Ni, and Zn grain removal were <1% of biosolids-applied concentrations, we estimated that tillage-layer (top 20 cm of soil) concentrations could be predicted within 5% of actual total soil contents based on biosolids additions of these nutrients. Biosolids additions produced linear increases in NH4HCO3diethylenetriaminepentaacetic acid (AB-DTPA) soil extract concentrations of P, Cu, Ni, and Zn. Soils initially were Zn deficient; biosolids application provided plant-available Zn for dryland wheat. If biosolids agronomic rates were based on P instead of N availability, these soils could not receive biosolids. Also, if the Colorado Phosphorus Index was utilized, agronomic rates would continue to be based on N. Biosolids addition to dryland winter wheat according to N agronomic rates is a feasible method of recycling plant nutrients.
Abbreviations: AB-DTPA, NH4HCO3diethylenetriaminepentaacetic acid Bslope, slope of N uptake vs. biosolids application rate, kg N uptake Mg1 biosolids Epredicted, predicted soil nutrient content, kg Esoil, total soil nutrient content, kg ICPAES, inductively coupled plasmaatomic emission spectrophotometer L/E, Littleton and Englewood Wastewater Treatment Plant Mr, estimated first-year mineralization rate, % NE, nitrogen equivalency, kg N Mg1 biosolids Np, plant available nitrogen, kg N Mg1 biosolids Nslope, slope of N uptake vs. N fertilizer application rate, kg N uptake kg1 N fertilizer NU, grain nitrogen uptake, kg ha1 Y, grain yield, kg ha1
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