R. Harrison et al., LONG-TERM EFFECTS OF HEAVY APPLICATIONS OF BIOSOLIDS ON ORGANIC-MATTER AND NUTRIENT CONTENT OF A COARSE-TEXTURED FOREST SOIL, Forest ecology and management, 66(1-3), 1994, pp. 165-177
Long-term changes in soil properties due to a single heavy application
of municipal biosolids (municipal sewage sludge) on a coarse-textured
glacial outwash soil were evaluated. Study sites, located at the Univ
ersity of Washington's Pack Experimental Forest, 100 km south of Seatt
le, were clearcut, cleared, fertilized with 500 Mg ha(-1) of municipal
biosolids and planted a variety of tree species in 1975. Soil samples
were taken in 1990 from three biosolids-amended forest stands and adj
acent unamended control sites by horizon to a depth of 185 cm. Biosoli
ds-amended samples had higher C (139 vs. 67 mg g(-1)), N (12 vs. 3.4 m
g g(-1)), P (14 vs. 2.2 mg g(-1)) and S (2.5 vs. 0.4 mg g(-1)) content
s in 0-7 cm mineral soil and other surface soil horizons compared with
adjacent unamended soil horizons, but showed no significant differenc
es below 25 cm. Soil pH ranged from 0.4 to 1.0 units lower in biosolid
s-amended vs, unamended soil throughout the sampled soil horizon. Soil
cation exchange capacity was higher in the surface soil horizons (30
vs. 18 mmol, kg(-1) in 0-7 cm soil), but there were no significant dif
ferences below 50 cm. Biosolids-amended samples had higher total Ca (1
3 vs. 6.1 mg g(-1) in 0-7 cm soil) and K (1.9 vs. 1.5 mg g(-1) in 0-7
cm soil) throughout the sampled soil profile. Total Mg was relatively
constant (2.0-3.0 mg g(-1)) throughout the sampled soil profile. Study
results indicate that one of the primary objectives of the original b
iosolids application (increasing total nutrients in the rooting zone o
f the forest soil) extended at least 15 years from the application dat
e.