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Effects of irrigation intensity on preferential solute transport in a stony soil

journal contribution
posted on 2023-05-03, 15:41 authored by Rogerio Cichota, Frank Kelliher, Steve Thomas, Gina Clemens, Patricia Fraser, Sam Carrick
If irrigation intensity exceeds the soil infiltration capacity, water may flow preferentially down cracks and large pores. In this situation, solute transport will involve only a fraction (f_t) of the soil’s water and leaching rate may be affected. To test the hypothesis that irrigation intensity does not affect solute preferential flow, an experiment was performed at Lincoln using 12 steel-encased lysimeters with a Lismore Stony Silt Loam soil under two irrigation intensities, 5 and 20 mm/h. Burn’s Equation was used to describe the measurements of non-reactive tracer’s concentration as function of drainage. For chloride, f_t was 0.85 and 0.58, for 5 and 20 mm/h respectively (P < 0.05), sufficient evidence to reject the hypothesis. Further, by assuming f_t to be 1.00 for 0.5 mm/h (median rainfall at Lincoln), we found that an exponential function fitted the data and a lower limit for f_t was 0.35. Implications for nutrient leaching are discussed.

History

Rights statement

© 2016 The Royal Society of New Zealand

Language

  • English

Does this contain Māori information or data?

  • No

Publisher

Taylor & Francis Group

Journal title

New Zealand Journal of Agricultural Research

ISSN

0028-8233

Citation

Cichota, R., Kelliher, F. M., Thomas, S. M., Clemens, G., Fraser, P. M., & Carrick, S. (2016). Effects of irrigation intensity on preferential solute transport in a stony soil. New Zealand Journal of Agricultural Research, 59(2), 141-155. DOI: 10.1080/00288233.2016.1155631

Funder

Plant and Food Research

Contract number

A14515

Job code

55016

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