Logo Kérwá
 

Subsurface Lateral Solute Transport in Turfgrass

Date

Authors

Camacho Umaña, Manuel Ernesto
Faúndez Urbina, Carlos Alberto
Amoozegar, Aziz
Gannon, Travis William
Heitman, Joshua Lee
León González, Ramón Gonzalo

Journal Title

Journal ISSN

Volume Title

Publisher

Abstract

Turfgrass managers have suspected that runoff-independent movement of herbicides and fertilizers is partially responsible for uneven turfgrass quality in sloped areas. We hypothesized that subsurface lateral solute transport might explain this phenomenon especially in areas with abrupt textural changes between surface and subsurface horizons. A study was conducted to track solute transport using bromide (Br−), a conservative tracer, as a proxy of turfgrass soil inputs. Field data confirmed the subsurface lateral movement of Br− following the soil slope direction, which advanced along the boundary between soil horizons over time. A model based on field data indicated that subsurface lateral movement is a mechanism that can transport fertilizers and herbicides away from the application area after they have been incorporated within the soil, and those solutes could accumulate and resurface downslope. Our results demonstrate that subsurface lateral transport of solutes, commonly ignored in risk assessment, can be an important process for off-target movement of fertilizers and pesticides within soils and turfgrass systems in sloped urban and recreational landscapes.

Description

Keywords

POLLUTION, HERBICIDES, FERTILIZERS, SOIL FERTILITY, SOILS

Citation

Collections

Endorsement

Review

Supplemented By

Referenced By

Creative Commons license

Except where otherwised noted, this item's license is described as Attribution-NoDerivatives 4.0 Internacional