New Zealand Journal of Agricultural Research abstracts
Minimising surface water pollution resulting from farm-dairy
effluent application to mole-pipe drained soils. I. An evaluation of
the deferred irrigation system for sustainable land treatment in the
Manawatu
D. J. Houlbrooke*
D. J. Horne
M. J. Hedley
J. A. Hanly
D. R. Scotter
Institute of Natural Resources
Massey University
Private Bag 11 222
Palmerston North, New Zealand
V. O. Snow
AgResearch Ltd
Grasslands Research Centre
Private Bag 11 008
Palmerston North, New Zealand
*Present address: AgResearch Ltd, Invermay Agricultural Research
Centre, Private Bag 50 034, Mosgiel, New Zealand. Email:
david.houlbrooke@agresearch.co.nz
Abstract There is little information available on
the magnitude of nutrient losses to surface water from the two-pond and
daily irrigation treatment systems for farm-dairy effluent (FDE). A
research site has been established on a mole-pipe drained Tokomaru silt
loam at Massey University’s No. 4 Dairy Farm (475 cows) to investigate
some of these issues. The site consists of four plots (40 ×
40 m) that have been instrumented to allow the continuous
monitoring of drainage and surface runoff. The research was conducted
over three lactation seasons (2000/01–2002/03). Based on data collected
at the study farm it was calculated that in the past 1500 kg N yr–1
and 250 kg P yr–1 were potentially discharged from the
two-pond system directly to a stream. A simulation exercise suggests
that approximately 108 kg N yr–1 and 18 kg P yr–1
would be lost to surface waters if daily irrigation was practised
at the farm. The problems of daily irrigation, particularly those
related to surface runoff, were further quantified in an experiment in
which a single 25-mm FDE irrigation was applied to a soil near field
capacity. Approximately 40% of the applied effluent left the soil
profile as mole and pipe drainage and 30% as surface runoff. These
losses equated to 12 kg N ha–1 and 2 kg P ha–1.
To minimise nutrient losses from land application of FDE, a system
called “deferred irrigation” was designed. Deferred irrigation involves
storing effluent in a two-pond treatment system and then applying it
strategically when there is a suitable soil water deficit, i.e., the
irrigation volume does not exceed the potential soil-water storage. The
evaluation of deferred irrigation over three lactation seasons showed
that direct losses of nutrients to surface waters were almost
eliminated and resulted in the drainage of only approximately 1% of the
total effluent nutrients applied. The successful adoption of the
deferred irrigation system would require only the capability to store
effluent and model or measure soil moisture status within the active
root zone.
Keywords farm-dairy effluent; spray irrigation;
nutrient loss; soil water balance; mole drainage; pipe drainage;
preferential flow
A04050; Received 24 May 2004; accepted 21 September 2004; Online
publication date 15 December 2004
New Zealand Journal of Agricultural Research, 2004, Vol. 47:
405–415
0028–8233/04/4704–0405 © The Royal Society of New Zealand 2004
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