Lw. Ma et al., MANURE MANAGEMENT IN AN IRRIGATED SILAGE CORN FIELD - EXPERIMENT AND MODELING, Soil Science Society of America journal, 62(4), 1998, pp. 1006-1017
On agricultural lands, animal waste disposal as fertilizer has been pr
acticed since the beginning of agriculture. However, the practice has
been an environmental concern in recent years due to over disposal of
animal waste in some instances. This study evaluated soil NO3 response
to beef-manure application on a corn (Zea mays L.) field and tested t
he Root Zone Water Quality Model (RZWQM) for manure management. The ex
periment site was located in Northeastern Colorado on a silage-corn fi
eld with a history of fertilization with beef manure every fall after
corn harvest. To study the residual effect of lung-term manure applica
tion, 582 kg ha(-1) of manure-N was applied to the east side of the fi
eld in the Fall of 1993, 1993, and 1995, while the west side received
manure in 1993 only. Average silage-corn yields from the west site wer
e 25.4, 31.9, and 22.5 Mg ha(-1) for 1994, 1995, and 1996, respectivel
y, which were not significantly different from that harvested from the
east site (25.1, 30.9, and 24.3 Mg ha(-1), respectively). Average soi
l NO3 concentrations decreased significantly from 14.9 to 8.5 mg N kg(
-1) in the top 30 cm of soil, and from 5.4 to 3.7 mg N kg(-1) in the 3
0- to 60-cm soil profile after stopping manure application, No signifi
cant difference in soil NO3 concentrations between the manured and not
-manured sites was found below 60 cm. Average plant N uptake ranged fr
om 140 to 362 kg N ha(-1) and was not significantly different between
the two sites. The RZWQM was calibrated on the basis of the measured s
ilage-corn yield and plant N uptake, and was then used to predict soil
NO3 concentration and total water storage in the soil profile. Genera
lly, the calibrated model provided adequate predictions for both NO3 a
nd soil water content with r(2) > 0.83. The model was further used to
evaluate alternative scenarios of manure and water management.