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Co-application of DMPSA and NBPT with urea mitigates both nitrous oxide emissions and nitrate leaching during irrigated potato production
2021
Souza, Emerson F.C. | Rosen, Carl J. | Venterea, Rodney T.
Potato (Solanum tuberosum L.) production in irrigated coarse-textured soils requires intensive nitrogen (N) fertilization which may increase reactive N losses. Biological soil additives including N-fixing microbes (NFM) have been promoted as a means to increase crop N use efficiency, though few field studies have evaluated their effects, and none have examined the combined use of NFM with microbial inhibitors. A 2-year study (2018–19) in an irrigated loamy sand quantified the effects of the urease inhibitor NBPT, the nitrification inhibitor DMPSA, NFM, and the additive combinations DMPSA + NBPT and DMPSA + NFM on potato performance and growing season nitrous oxide (N₂O) emissions and nitrate (NO₃⁻) leaching. All treatments, except a zero-N control, received diammonium phosphate at 45 kg N ha⁻¹ and split applied urea at 280 kg N ha⁻¹. Compared with urea alone, DMPSA + NBPT reduced NO₃⁻ leaching and N₂O emissions by 25% and 62%, respectively, and increased crop N uptake by 19% in one year, although none of the additive treatments increased tuber yields. The DMPSA and DMPSA + NBPT treatments had greater soil ammonium concentration, and all DMPSA-containing treatments consistently reduced N₂O emissions, compared to urea-only. Use of NBPT by itself reduced NO₃⁻ leaching by 21% across growing seasons and N₂O emissions by 37% in 2018 relative to urea-only. In contrast to the inhibitors, NFM by itself increased N₂O by 23% in 2019; however, co-applying DMPSA with NFM reduced N₂O emissions by ≥ 50% compared to urea alone. These results demonstrate that DMPSA can mitigate N₂O emissions in potato production systems and that DMPSA + NBPT can reduce both N₂O and NO₃⁻ losses and increase the N supply for crop uptake. This is the first study to show that combining a nitrification inhibitor with NFM can result in decreased N₂O emissions in contrast to unintended increases in N₂O emissions that can occur when NFM is applied by itself.
Mostrar más [+] Menos [-]‘Agricultural Waste to Treasure’ – Biochar and eggshell to impede soil antibiotics/antibiotic resistant bacteria (genes) from accumulating in Solanum tuberosum L
2018
Jiao, Wentao | Du, Ruijun | Ye, Mao | Sun, Mingming | Feng, Yanfang | Wan, Jinzhong | Zhao, Yuanchao | Zhang, Zhongyun | Huang, Duan | Du, Daolin | Jiang, Xin
Soil contamination with antibiotics and antibiotic resistant bacteria/genes (ARB/ARGs) has becoming an emerging environmental problem. Moreover, the mixed pollutants' transfer and accumulation from soil to tuberous vegetables has posed a great threat against food security and human health. In this work, the application of two absorbing materials (maize biochar and sulfate modified eggshell) was able to reduce the poisonous effect of soil antibiotics on potato root system by stimulate the dissipation of water-soluble antibiotics in soil; and also improve food quality by increasing potato starch, protein, fat, and vitamins. Meanwhile, both amendments could effectively decrease the classes and the accumulative abundance of ARB and ARGs (sulI, sulII, catI, catII, ermA, ermB) in the edible parts of potato. The lowest abundance of ARGs was detected in the biochar application treatment, with the accumulative ARG level of 8.9 × 10² and 7.2 × 10² copies mL⁻¹ in potato peel (sull + catI + ermA) and tuberous root (sulI), respectively. It is the first study to demonstrate the feasibility of biochar and eggshell derived from agricultural wastes as green absorbing materials to reduce soil antibiotic, ARB, and ARGs accumulation risk in tuberous vegetable.
Mostrar más [+] Menos [-]Plant uptake of radionuclides in lysimeter experiments
1998
Gerzabek, M.H. | Strebl, F. | Temmel, B. (Austrian Research Centre Seibersdorf, Division of Life Sciences, A-2444 Seibersdorf (Austria))
Responses of plants to simulated saline drift as affected by species and conditions of exposure
1991
McCune, D.C. | Silberman, D.H. (Boyce Thompson Institute for Plant Research, Cornell University, Ithaca, NY 14853 (USA))
An assessment of the impact of ambient ozone on field-grown crops in New Jersey using the EDU method: Part 1 - white potato (Solanum tuberosum)
1990
Clarke, B.B. | Greenhalgh-Weidman, B. | Brennan, E.G. (Department of Plant Pathology, Cook College, New Jersey Agricultural Experiment Station, New Brunswick, NJ 08903 (USA))
Transfer of cadmium, lead, and zinc from industrially contaminated soil to crop plants: a field study
1996
Dudka, S. | Piotrowska, M. | Terelak, H. (The University of Georgia, Department of Crop and Soil Sciences, 3111 Miller Plant Science Building, Athens, GA 30602 (USA))
Effects of ethylenediurea (EDU) on ozone-induced acceleration of foliar senescence in potato (Solanum tuberosum L.)
1996
Eckardt, N.A. | Pell, E.J. (Department of Plant Pathology, Pennsylvania State University, University Park, PA 16802 (USA))
Effect of soil pH on availability to crops of metals in sewage sludge-treated soils. II. Cadmium uptake by crops and implications for human dietary intake
1994
Smith, S.R. (Water Research Centre, Medmenham, Marlow, Bucks. SL7 2HD (United Kingdom))
Polynuclear aromatic hydrocarbons in crops from long-term field experiments amended with sewage sludge
1992
Wild, S.R. | Berrow, M.L. | McGrath, S.P. | Jones, K.C. (Institute of Environmental and Biological Sciences, Lancaster University, Lancaster LA1 4YQ (United Kingdom))
Toxicity Assessment of Fluoride-Contaminated Soil and Wastewater in Solanum tuberosum
2022
Devi, Gitika | Kushwaha, Anamika | Goswami, Lalit | Chakrabarty, Sutapa | Haradīpa Kaura, | Sathe, Sandip S. | Bahukhandi, Kanchan | Bhan, Uday | Sarma, Hari Prasad
Groundwater is the most common source of drinking and irrigation in the world. As a result of human activities and natural processes, fluoride (F⁻) levels have increased in most groundwater supplies in the recent decades. Excessive F⁻ in the potable water is a serious health problem in rural areas of many developing countries. Hence, there is an urgent need to identify its accumulation and toxicity into the food chain, and further find a simple and cost-effective method for soil and water defluoridation in such areas. In this regard, a pot experiment was conducted to investigate F⁻ uptake, accumulation, and toxic effects on two varieties of Solanum tuberosum (Kufri Jyoti and Kufri Sindhuri). A comparative study was undertaken to evaluate the effect of different sources (soil and water) of F⁻ contamination on its uptake by the plant. Five different levels of soil and water contamination were used. F⁻ concentration in both varieties was in the following order: root > shoot > tuber (with peel) > tuber (without peel) with the increase in F⁻ concentration in both soil and water. Furthermore, the decrease in biomass yield and all analyzed biochemical parameters in both varieties was observed with increasing F⁻ concentration in soil and water. Hence, appropriate preventative steps must be adopted to reduce the health risk in the selected area.
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