Agricultural & Environmental Letters (Mar 2018)

Organic Phosphorus Can Make an Important Contribution to Phosphorus Loss from Riparian Buffers

  • Rosalind J. Dodd,
  • Andrew N. Sharpley,
  • Lawrence G. Berry

DOI
https://doi.org/10.2134/ael2018.01.0002
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 3, no. 1

Abstract

Read online

Vegetative buffer strips (VBS) and managed or unmanaged riparian zones between the edge of field and receiving watercourse are widely adopted conservation practices aimed at reducing nonpoint nutrient pollution. However, their effectiveness at decreasing phosphorus (P) loss has been mixed. This study investigated the effectiveness of a VBS and a forested riparian zone (FRZ) in decreasing P loss from pasture soils receiving swine manure and aimed to determine the potential factors controlling P release, using water extractable P (WEP) as a proxy for P loss. The inorganic WEP concentrations were significantly greater in the fertilized pasture zone soils than the VBS or FRZ soils. However, there was no significant difference between the field and riparian soils for total WEP due to increased contribution from organic WEP in these soils. Degree of P saturation, which is a function of soil test P, was a good predictor of inorganic WEP, but not organic WEP, where the variation in concentrations was better explained by variables involved in biotic P release.