169Not for Export: Contaminant Issues in Agricultural Drainage: III

Poster Session

S11 Soils & Environmental Quality

The continued expansion of agricultural drainage has strong implications for agricultural management to protect water quality. In this topical session, we will review recent developments to assess and reduce contaminant transport via drainage. The session will include discussion of changes in local hydrology effected by artificial drainage and the export of a variety of potential contaminants (nutrients, pathogens, pharmaceuticals, pesticides, salts, etc.) from agricultural land. Trade-offs and risks/benefits of agricultural drainage will be discussed. This session will be useful to those interested in reducing contaminant transport to improve water quality and preserve agricultural productivity.

Monday, October 22, 2012: 4:00 PM-6:00 PM
Duke Energy Convention Center, Exhibit Hall AB, Level 1
Organizers:
Sharon Papiernik and Dan Jaynes
Presider:
Sharon Papiernik
2404
Composition of N Gases Produced in Riparian Buffers: The Role of Artificial Drainage.
Lori Bebinger, Indiana University and Purdue University - Indianapolis; Pierre-Andre Jacinthe, Indiana University and Purdue University - Indianapolis
2405
Proposed Revisions to the Ontario P Index.
D. Keith Reid, AAFC; Adam Hayes, Ontario Ministry of Agriculture & Food; Christine Mary Brown, Ontario Ministry of Agriculture, Food and Rural Affairs; Daniel Saurette, AAFC; Andrew Jamieson, AAFC; Kevin McKague, Ontario Ministry of Agriculture, Food and Rural Affairs; Donald Hilborn, Ontario Ministry of Agriculture, Food and Rural Affairs; Bonnie Ball, Ontario Ministry of Agriculture, Food and Rural Affairs; Deanna Nemeth, Ontario Ministry of Agriculture, Food and Rural Affairs
2406
Effect of Managed Subsurface Drainage and Polymer-Coated Urea On Nutrient Loss From a Silty Clay Soil in Corn Production.
Patrick Nash, University of Missouri; Kelly Nelson, University of Missouri; Peter Motavalli, University of Missouri
2407
Controls On Soil Phosphorus in Native, Disturbed and Hydrologically Restored Agricultural Wetlands.
Clinton D. Church, USDA-ARS; Peter Kleinman, USDA-ARS; Megan Lang, USDA-ARS; Jarrod Miller, USDA-ARS
2408
Leachate Analysis from an Organic Burial Pit Containing Euthanized Large Animals.
Forbes Walker, University of Tennessee; Shawn Hawkins, University of Tennessee; Fu-Min Menn, University of Tennessee; Kelly Cobaugh, University of Tennessee; Jennifer DeBruyn, University of Tennessee
2409
Predicting Nutrient and Contaminant Transport Via Fractures in Glacially-Related Fine-Grained Soils Using Field and Laboratory Soil Texture Data.
Julie Weatherington-Rice, The Ohio State University; Eun Kyoung Kim, The Ohio State University; Ann D. Christy, The Ohio State University; Young Woon Kang, The Ohio State University
2410
Ionophore Sorption and Desorption in Coastal Plain Soils.
Saptashati Biswas, University of Maryland; Joshua McGrath, University of Maryland; Amir Sapkota, University of Maryland
2411
Nutrient Loss Through Tile Drainage Enhanced by Soil Cracks.
Kosuke Noborio, School of Agriculture, Meiji University; Chin S. Tan, Greenhouse & Processing Crops Research Centre; Yuki Shoji, School of Agriculture, Meiji University; Tiequan Zhang, Greenhouse & Processing Crops Research Centre
2412
Reducing Nitrate Loading From Tile Drain Effluent Through the Use of Denitrification Bioreactors.
Tom G. Bottoms, University of California-Davis; Tim Hartz, University of California-Davis; Richard Smith, University of California, Cooperative Extension; Michael Cahn, University of California, Cooperative Extension