389-1 Reducing Herbicides and Veterinary Antibiotics Losses From Agroecosystems Using Vegetative Buffers.

See more from this Division: S10 Wetland Soils
See more from this Session: Treatment Wetlands and Vegetative Strips for Water Quality Improvement
Wednesday, October 19, 2011: 1:05 PM
Henry Gonzalez Convention Center, Room 210B
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Robert Lerch, USDA-ARS Cropping Systems & Water Quality Research Unit, Columbia, MO, Chung-Ho Lin, Center for Agroforestry, Department of Forestry, University of Missouri, Columbia, MO, Keith Goyne, Soil, Environmental and Atmospheric Sciences, University of Missouri-Columbia, Columbia, MO and Harold Garrett, Department of Forestry, University of Missouri, Center for Agroforestry, Columbia, MO
Multiple species vegetative buffer strips (VBSs) have been recommended as an effective approach to mitigate agrochemical transport in surface runoff while at the same time offering a broader range of long-term ecological and environmental benefits. However, the effect of VBS designs and species composition on reducing herbicide and veterinary antibiotic transport has not been well documented. An experiment consisting of three VBS designs and one continuous cultivated fallow control replicated in triplicate was conducted to assess effectiveness in reducing herbicide and antibiotic transport for claypan soils. The three VBS designs include (i) tall fescue, (ii) tall fescue with a switchgrass hedge barrier, and (iii) native vegetation (largely eastern gamagrass). Rainfall simulation was used to create uniform antecedent soil moisture content in the plots and to generate runoff. Our results suggested that all VBS significantly reduced the transport of dissolved and sediment-bound atrazine, metolachlor, and glyphosate in surface runoff by 58 to 72%. Four to 8 m of any tested VBS reduced dissolved sulfamethazine transport in the surface runoff by more than 70%. The tall fescue VBS was overall most effective at reducing dissolved tylosin and enrofloxacin transport in the runoff (>75%). The developed exponential regression models can be used to predict expected field-scale results and provide design criteria for effective field implementation of grass buffers. Our study has demonstrated that an optimized VBS design may achieve desired agrochemical reductions and minimize acreage removed from crop production. 
See more from this Division: S10 Wetland Soils
See more from this Session: Treatment Wetlands and Vegetative Strips for Water Quality Improvement