Considerations of a Field-Scale Soil Carbon Budget For Furrow Irrigation
Abstract
There is a general lack of information on the effects of irrigation on soil carbon (C) sequestration in (semi)arid regions. For that purpose we present results of the sediment and C budget of a furrow-irrigated field, by analyzing water and sediments of irrigation and associated tail waters of a 30 ha corn field (Zea mays) in the Central Valley in California. This field was monitored to assess the effects of minimum tillage versus standard tillage on soil C sequestration and greenhouse gas emissions. Water samples of two irrigation events in July and August, 2004, were collected and analyzed for suspended sediment, dissolved organic C (DOC) and N (DON), total C and N. Field and soil water budgets were estimated from meteorological data, flow measurements of applied irrigation and runoff water, and neutron-probe soil water measurements. Tail waters contained less sediment but more organic C than irrigation waters, due to particle settlement and enrichment in organic matter. Tillage treatment had no significant effect on composition of water or sediment. Furrow irrigation resulted in a net field input of 700 kg sediment ha-1, 21.4 kg C ha-1 and 7.7 kg N ha-1. The added C by the sedimentation accounted for about two thirds of the total C increase. Our experiments showed the importance of time scale in C budgeting for intensively irrigated agroecosystems, where fast dynamics and large variability of inputs are common.
- Publication:
-
AGU Fall Meeting Abstracts
- Pub Date:
- December 2005
- Bibcode:
- 2005AGUFM.B43A0237P
- Keywords:
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- 0402 Agricultural systems;
- 0428 Carbon cycling (4806);
- 0496 Water quality