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Properties of the DOM in Soil Irrigated with Wastewater Effluent and Its Interaction with Copper Ions
2018
Fine, P. | Carmeli, S. | Borisover, M. | Hayat, R. | Beriozkin, A. | Hass, A. | Mingelgrin, U.
DOM samples extracted from a wastewater effluent (EW) and from leachates collected from lysimeters in which Eucalyptus trees were deficit-irrigated with either EW (EL) or with water pumped from an aquifer recharged with the EW (TL) were studied. As ascertained by principal component analysis, DOM from both leachates displayed similar properties, different from those of the EW DOM. ¹H-NMR and FTIR spectra of the > 1-kDa DOM size fraction of the EW revealed less aromaticity than this fraction of either leachate. 3-D fluorescence maps indicated that the density of nitro, carboxyl, or phenol groups attached to aromatic structures was lowest in the EW DOM and only that DOM displayed protein-like fluorescence peaks. The leachates’ DOM > 1 kDa fraction complexed more Cu²⁺ per unit C than this fraction of the EW (Kd = ~ 10⁵ and ~ 10⁴ L kg⁻¹ DOC, respectively, at ~ 10⁻⁵ M free Cu²⁺). While Cu complexed preferentially with non-fluorescing sites in the EW DOM, in the leachates’ DOM, Cu bound primarily with fluorescing (aromatic) groups or with adjacent groups. The similar behavior displayed by DOM from leachates obtained under irrigation with either EW or reclaimed water suggests that processes occurring in the soil (e.g., by roots or microbiota) influenced the soil DOM’s properties to a larger extent than the nature of OM in the irrigation water. Thus, irrigation with good quality secondary effluent should not significantly enhance heavy metal mobility as compared to their mobility under irrigation with higher quality water.
Mostrar más [+] Menos [-]Effects of regulated deficit irrigation applied at different growth stages of greenhouse grown tomato on substrate moisture, yield, fruit quality, and physiological traits
2021
GHANNEM, Amal | BEN AISSA, Imed | MAJDOUB, Rajouene
Given a critical water scarcity in arid and semi-arid Tunisian areas and aiming to reduce irrigation water request, it is crucial to identify and apply the best water-saving practices in these irrigated areas. Tomato is a high-water-requiring vegetable crop, thus increasing the pressure on water resources and environment. Its sustainable cultivation in such alarming conditions requires an adaptation of on-farm irrigation water-saving strategies preserving also the crop yield and leading to a fruit quality improvement. This study aimed to explore the effects of the regulated deficit irrigation (RDI) as an irrigation water-saving strategy, on yield, fruit quality, and physiological behavior of greenhouse grown potted tomato crop (Solanum lycopersicum L.) during three identified growth stages. The managed water regimes were (i) full irrigation (FI) ensuring 100% of the estimated water crop requirements, (ii) RDI1-25 and RDI1-50 ensuring respectively 75% and 50% of FI water supplies during the vegetative crop stage (stage I), (iii) RDI2–25 and RDI2–50 ensuring respectively 75% and 50% of FI water supplies from first truss blossom until first harvest (stage II), and (iv) RDI3-25 and RDI3-50 ensuring respectively 75% and 50% of FI supplies during the rest of the harvest period (stage III). The results showed that the substrate moisture vary significantly with the water deficit regime applied under different growth stages, thus providing different levels of substrate water content. Under RDI2, the tomato yield was the highest when compared with FI, RDI1, and RDI3 regimes. Indeed, saving the water by 20% under RDI2-50 reduced only 3% of tomato yield. Deficit irrigation under ripening fruit and flowering stages, mainly with 50% of water supplies shortage, resulted in higher fruit skin color, firmness, and refractometry index (°Brix) when compared to FI and RDI1. Physiological traits measurements indicated that FI exhibited the highest leaf stomatal conductance (gs) and chlorophyll index (CI) values while RDI3 exhibited the lowest gs and CI values among all the RDI treatments. Results are valuable in considering gs and CI as an efficient indicators of tomato plant water status. The results are also an important contribution to identify the second tomato growth stage as the best period that tomato plant tolerate water shortage without significant yield decrease, as well a rather fruit quality improvement. These results help to reach the challenge “more crop per drop” and can contribute to water scarcity remediation.
Mostrar más [+] Menos [-]Soil CO2 emissions from summer maize fields under deficit irrigation
2020
Hou, Huijing | Han, Zhengdi | Yang, Yaqin | Abudu, Shalamu | Cai, Huanjie | Li, Zhanchao
Irrigation practice is one of the main factors affecting soil carbon dioxide (CO₂) emission from croplands and therefore on global warming. As a water-saving irrigation practice, the deficit irrigation has been widely used in summer maize fields and is expected to adapt to the shortage of water resources in Northwest China. In this study, we examined the impacts of deficit irrigation practices on soil CO₂ emissions through a plot experiment with different irrigation regimes in a summer maize field in Northwest China. The irrigation regimes consisted of three irrigation treatments: deficit irrigation treatments (T1: reduce the irrigation amount by 20%, T2: reduce the irrigation amount by 40%) and full irrigation (T0) treatments. The results showed that the soil CO₂ cumulative emissions with T1 and T2 were decreased by 9.8% (p < 0.05) and 14.3% (p < 0.05), respectively, compared with T0 treatment (1365.3 kg-C ha⁻¹). However, there were no significant differences between T1 and T2 treatments (p > 0.05). Soil CO₂ fluxes with different irrigation treatments showed significant correlations with soil moisture (p < 0.001) and soil temperature (p < 0.05). It was also observed that summer maize yields with T1 and T2 treatments were reduced by 4.9% (p > 0.05) and 30.9% (p < 0.05), compared with T0 (34.3 t ha⁻¹), respectively. The findings demonstrate that the deficit irrigation treatment (T1) resulted in a considerable decrease in soil CO₂ emissions without impacting the summer maize yields significantly. The results could be interpreted to develop better irrigation management practices aiming at reducing soil CO₂ emissions, saving water, and ensuring crop yield in the summer maize fields in Northwest China.
Mostrar más [+] Menos [-]Effect of irrigation with detergent-containing water on foxtail millet shoot biomass and ion accumulation
2019
Heidari, Hassan | Yosefi, Maliheh | Sasani, Shahryar | Nosratti, Iraj
Water shortage leads farmers to use sewages for irrigation. Sewages contain a large amount of laundry detergent. In this study the impact of irrigation by contaminated water on shoot biomass and seed germination of foxtail millet (Setaria italica) was investigated. The research was conducted as laboratory and pot experiments. Iso-potentials (− 0.042, − 0.077, and − 0.415 MPa) of polyethylene glycol (PEG, water deficit treatment) and laundry detergent (contamination treatment) made the laboratory experiment treatments. The pot experiment included contamination factor (0, 0.1, 1, and 10 g L⁻¹ of laundry detergent) and deficit irrigation factor (irrigation interval of 1, 2, and 3 days). Results of this study showed that at the iso-potential, laundry detergent had more negative effect on seed germination traits when compared with PEG. There was no germination at − 0.415 MPa of laundry detergent. Both drought and contamination reduced dry forage yield, plant height, leaf number, leaf area, leaf dry and fresh weight, stem dry, and fresh weight. Detergent concentration of 10 g L⁻¹ with irrigation interval of 3 days had a forage yield reduction of 63% compared to control (laundry detergent concentration of 0 g L⁻¹ with irrigation interval of 1 day). Detergent concentration of 10 g L⁻¹ with irrigation interval of 1 day had a sodium increase of 1847% compared to control. Based on the results of this study, it is recommended not to irrigate foxtail millet farm by contaminated water with laundry detergent higher than 1 g L⁻¹.
Mostrar más [+] Menos [-]Cultivation modes and deficit irrigation strategies to improve 13C carbon isotope, photosynthesis, and winter wheat productivity in semi-arid regions
2019
Shahzād, ʻAlī | Xu, Yueyue | Ma, Xiangcheng | Henchiri, Malak | Cai, Tie | Ren, Xiaolong | Zhang, Jiahua | Jia, Zhikuan
Determining the effect of ridge-furrow cultivation mode on ¹³C carbon isotope discrimination, photosynthetic capacity, and leaf gas exchange characteristics of winter wheat leaves will help to increase wheat production. To verify these effects of cultivation modes with deficit irrigation will provide scientific basis for determining water-saving strategy. Therefore, a mobile rainproof shelter was used to explore the potential benefit of two cultivation modes: (1) the ridge-furrow (RF) precipitation system and (2) traditional flat planting (TF) with two deficit irrigation levels (150, 75 mm) and three precipitation levels (275 mm, 200 mm, 125 mm) were tested in this study. Plastic film mulching on ridges had significant effects on rainwater collection and improved soil water retention. Analysis of the light-response curve showed that RF2₁₅₀ treatment significantly increased flag leaf net photosynthetic rate (Pₙ), stomatal conductance (Gₛ), intercellular CO₂ concentration (Cᵢ), transpiration rate (Tᵣ), leaf WUE, and total contents of chlorophyll ab of wheat at flowering stage than that of TF planting. The RF system significantly increases maximum net photosynthetic rate (Pₙₘₐₓ) (16.2%), light saturation points (LSP) (6.7%), and Pₙ under CO₂-response curves compared to the TF cultivation across the two irrigation and three simulated rainfall levels. The RF system significantly increased Δ¹³C (0.7%) and caused a notable increase in the intercellular to ambient CO₂ concentration ratio (7.6%), dry matter translocation (54.9%), and grain yield plant⁻¹ (19%) compared to the TF planting. Furthermore, Δ¹³C was significantly positively correlated with Pₙ, Gₛ, Cᵢ/Cₐ, Cᵢ, Tᵣ, Pₙₘₐₓ, LSP, and grain yield. This study suggested that the RF2₁₅₀ treatment was the best water-saving technique because it increased soil water content, Δ¹³C, biomass, grain yield, and leaf WUE.
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