See more from this Division:
A05 Environmental Quality
See more from this Session:
Symposium--Reuse of Wastewaters: Land Application Issues
Monday, November 1, 2010: 11:05 AM
Long Beach Convention Center, Room 104A, First Floor
Deepak Jaiswal and Herschel Elliott, Pennsylvania State University, State College, PA
Phosphorus (P) indices are field evaluation tools for
assessing P loss from agricultural landscapes amended with manures and
fertilizers. Because off-site P migration is differentially impacted by the P
source, this study was undertaken to evaluate the suitability of the Pennsylvania
P index for fields irrigated with P-containing municipal wastewater effluent
for 26 yr at Penn State's Living Filter
(LF) system. Annual loadings of 217 kg P2O5
ha-1 from year-round application of effluent containing 3.5 mg P L-1
at 2 in wk-1 (maximum regulatory rate) were used to evaluate index
rating for cropped fields as a “worst case” condition. Based on the index application
factor (AF), two different ratings were determined: (1) maximum AF (1.0)
throughout the year, (2) maximum AF for frozen months (Dec, Jan, and Feb) and
AF = 0.4 (corresponding to incorporation within 1 wk) for the remaining months.
For the first situation, the P loss ratings of all the cropfields were “high”
or “very high” which would, respectively, restrict effluent application to
P-based rates or prohibit it altogether. Using different AF values for frozen
and unfrozen conditions, only fields located within 61 m (200 ft) of the
receiving tributaries had “high” P loss ratings (P-based application). Index
evaluation for actual conditions
(irrigation restricted to non-frozen months with an annual application of 130
kg P2O5 ha-1) results in “low” and “medium” P
loss ratings for most fields, suggesting that current effluent practices will
be sustainable under P-based nutrient management. We conclude that typical
P-indexing algorithms need to be modified to fairly evaluate wastewater
irrigation sites where effluent runoff is prohibited by law and applied soluble
P is effectively incorporated below the surface with the percolating effluent.