297-3 Soil Profile Nitrogen Under Different Biofuel Feedstock Grasses and Irrigation Regimes in the Irrigated Arid Pacific Northwest.

Poster Number 1733

See more from this Division: S06 Soil & Water Management & Conservation
See more from this Session: Bioenergy Crops and Their Impacts On Crop Production, Soil and Environmental Quality: II
Tuesday, October 23, 2012
Duke Energy Convention Center, Exhibit Hall AB, Level 1
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Kefyalew Girma1, Romulus O. Okwany1, Steven Fransen2, Troy Peters3, William Pan4, Michael Ottman5, Harold P. Collins6 and Joan Davenport1, (1)Crop and Soil Sciences, Washington State University-IAREC, Prosser, WA
(2)Crop and Soil Sciences, Washington State University, Prosser, WA
(3)Irrigated Agriculture Research and Extension Center, Washington State University, Prosser, WA
(4)Crop and Soil Sciences, Washington State University, Pullman, WA
(5)1140 E. South Campus Drive, University of Arizona, Tucson, AZ
(6)USDA-ARS, Prosser, WA
Managing soil profile NO3-N through crop selection and irrigation is a fundamental requirement for sustainable cellulosic biofuel feedstock crop production.  A four-year study was initiated in 2008 to assess the effect of biofuel feedstock grasses on soil profile NO3. The experimental design was a split plot with four blocks. The main plots were  irrigation levels (60%, 80%, and 100% ET). The subplots constituted three species of cellulosic biofuel feedstock crops and soil sampling depths.  Kanlow, Shawnee, and Blackwell switchgrass varieties (Panicum virgatum) , Sugar T sorghum (Sorghum bicolor), and Pete gamagrass (Tripsacum dactyloides) were evaluated.  Soil and root samples were collected from 0-105 cm depth at 15-cm intervals following harvest in October 2011.  The soil and root mixture was dried in a forced air oven at 60⁰C for 7-days and separated mechanically using a 1-mm sieve. The soil samples were grounded and used to determine soil NO3 levels. The root samples were washed mechanically, sieved using a 0.125-mm sieve, dried in a forced air oven at 60⁰C for 7-days, and weighed.  Soil profile NO3 was 1.7 mg/kg in switchgrass, 5.6 mg/kg in gamagrass, and 13.1 mg/kg in sorghum averaged over depths.   Sorghum exhibited increased soil profile NO3 levels at 0-60 cm depth and decreased as depth increases. Nitrate accumulated in the soil profile of switchgrass was significantly lower than the other species across all depths . Sorghum exhibited higher soil-NO3 at different depths than switchgrass or Pete gamagrass. The switchgrass cultivars had the lowest soil profile NO3 across all soil depths . Similarly, the correlation between root biomass and soil profile NO3 for switchgrass (r=0.63, p<0.001 for Kanlow; r=0.58, p<0.001 for Blackwell; and r=0.46, p<0.05 for Shawnee) was significant, unlike sorghum (r= -0.05, p>0.1).  This suggests that the switchgrass cultivars were superior in scavenging nitrogen when compared with either gamagrass or sorghum.
See more from this Division: S06 Soil & Water Management & Conservation
See more from this Session: Bioenergy Crops and Their Impacts On Crop Production, Soil and Environmental Quality: II