Brahy, Vincent
[UCL]
Delvaux, Bruno
[UCL]
Henao-Toro, MC
Goor, F
Ledent, Jean-François
[UCL]
We evaluated the effectiveness of capillary-wick samplers (PCAPS) for continuous monitoring of resident nitrate concentration in three 'soil-crop-climate' systems differing in soil type, land use and climate. These systems involved: (i) acid silty soils under a beech-oak forest affected by heavy N-NH4+ deposition in Belgium; (ii) silty soils under wheat cropping and a short rotation willow coppice plantation (SRC) in Belgium; and (iii) volcanic ash soils under plantain cultivation with and without urea fertilization in Colombia. The PCAPS continuously applied a suction of 0 to 5.4 kPa to the soil water below the effective rooting zone without the need for an auxiliary vacuum source. The nitrate concentrations showed large variations over time and ranged between 6-192 mg l(-1) under forest, 19-143 mg l(-1) under wheat, 11-47 mg l(-1) under SRC and 3-138 mg l(-1) under fertilized plantain. The analysis of the soil leachates collected with PCAPS confirms previous results dealing with leaching of nitrate and alkaline and alkaline-earth cations in similar 'soil-crop-climate' systems. It was concluded that PCAPS was a suitable tool to collect soil solutions and that it could help to assess nitrate leaching losses in various ecological or cropping conditions.
Bibliographic reference |
Brahy, Vincent ; Delvaux, Bruno ; Henao-Toro, MC ; Goor, F ; Ledent, Jean-François. Assessing Passive Capillary-Wick Samplers for monitoring resident nitrate concentration in real field. In: Soil Use and Management, Vol. 18, no. 1, p. 18-25 (2002) |
Permanent URL |
http://hdl.handle.net/2078.1/42094 |