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Impacts of paper sludge and manure on soil and biomass production of willow
Authors:Amos K Quaye  Timothy A VolkSasha Hafner  Donald J LeopoldCharles Schirmer
Affiliation:a Department of Forest and Natural Resources Management, SUNY College of Environmental Science and Forestry 1, Forestry Dr. Syracuse, NY 13210, USA
b Department of Environmental and Forest Biology, SUNY College of Environmental Science and Forestry 1, Forestry Dr. Syracuse, NY 13210, USA
c USDA-ARS, 10300 Baltimore Ave., Beltsville, MD 20705, USA
Abstract:Land application of organic wastes to short rotation woody crops (SRWC) can reduce the environmental impacts associated with waste disposal and enhance the productivity of biomass production systems. Understanding the potential impacts of organic amendments however, requires the examination of changes in soil characteristics and plant productivity. This study was conducted to evaluate the effect of paper sludge and dairy manure on biomass production of shrub willow (Salix dasyclados SV1) and to determine the impacts of these amendments on soil chemical properties. Treatments included urea, dairy manure and paper sludge separately and in combination, and a control. These materials were applied in the summer of 2005 to two fields of SV1 at different stages of growth: An old field with one year old shoots on a 10 year old root system and a young field which was beginning regrowth after being coppiced at the end of its first growing season. Foliar nutrient concentrations and soil chemical properties were analyzed at the end of the second growing season after treatment application to determine plant response to the fertilization regimes and to determine the effects of fertilization on soil characteristics. Fertilization did not increase biomass production in either field. However, application of the N-poor paper sludge did not reduce yield either. In general, fertilization did not influence soil or foliar chemistry, although there were some exceptions. The lack of response observed in this study is probably related to the nutrient status of the site or losses of applied nutrients.
Keywords:Commercial fertilizer  Foliar nutrients  Organic wastes  Salix dasyclados  Soil chemical properties
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