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Citation
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HERO ID
2607571
Reference Type
Journal Article
Title
Soil Water Repellency Development in Amended Sand Rootzones
Author(s)
Moody, DR; Schlossberg, MJ; Archibald, DD; Mcnitt, AS; Fidanza, MA
Year
2009
Is Peer Reviewed?
Yes
Journal
Crop Science
ISSN:
0011-183X
EISSN:
1435-0653
Volume
49
Issue
5
Page Numbers
1885-1892
DOI
10.2135/cropsci2008.08.0463
Web of Science Id
WOS:000269359700041
Abstract
Particulate organic matter (OM) and surface area-limited sands are associated with soil water repellency (SWR) in turfgrass systems. The increasing ubiquity of amended sand rootzones warrants investigation of factors contributing to SWR. Our objective was to identify how amendment type and/or inclusion rate affect rootzone SWR over a range of irrigation regimes. A U.S. Golf Association-specified sand was amended with dried turfgrass roots and either sphagnum peat moss (SPM), reed sedge peat (RSP), biosolid compost (BSC), or calcined clay (CC) at 0, 0.1, or 0.2 m(3) m(-3). Mixes were saturated, gravitationally drained, incubated under isothermal ventilation having mean vapor pressures of 1.78, 2.19, or 2.45 kPa, and reirrigated when matric tension exceeded 300 kPa. After 138 cl, rootzone subsamples were eluted of particulate OM before measuring mineral-adsorbed hydrocarbon content (MAHC) by infrared spectroscopy. The repellency index was used to quantify SWR of intact (R(intact)) and eluted (R(eluted)) samples. Amendment rate (0.2 > 0.1 > 0 m(3) m(-3)) and type (BSC > RSP = SPM > CC) significantly affected R(intact). Only CC-amended rootzones were more wettable than the control. Severely elevated R(eluted) and MAHC were observed in all sands amended by BSC. Inclusion of SPM or RSP at 0.1 m(3) m(-3) resulted in R(eluted) and MAHC values statistically equivalent to the control rootzone. At 0.2 m(3) m(-3) inclusion, all organic amendments significantly increased R(eluted) and MAHC relative to the control (BSC > RSP = SPM).
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