Effects of long-term irrigation with treated wastewater. Part I: Evolution of soil physico-chemical properties

► The long-term impact of irrigation on a Mediterranean sandy soil irrigated with Treated wastewater (TWW) was beneficial with regard to water and nutrient supplying. ► The exchangeable cations was not fixed on the exchange complex but partly stored as labile salts or in concentrated soil solution....

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Veröffentlicht in:Applied geochemistry 2010-11, Vol.25 (11), p.1703-1710
Hauptverfasser: Tarchouna, Lobna Gharbi, Merdy, Patricia, Raynaud, Michel, Pfeifer, Hans-Rudolf, Lucas, Yves
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:► The long-term impact of irrigation on a Mediterranean sandy soil irrigated with Treated wastewater (TWW) was beneficial with regard to water and nutrient supplying. ► The exchangeable cations was not fixed on the exchange complex but partly stored as labile salts or in concentrated soil solution. ► Both saturated and unsaturated hydraulic conductivity exhibited a significant diminution in the irrigated soil, but remained high enough to prevent soil salinization. ► Exchangeable Sodium Percentage (ESP) exhibited high values (20% on average) and the soil organic carbon was lowered due to irrigation. ► No significant effect was noticed on soil mineralogical composition due to irrigation. The long-term impact of irrigation on a Mediterranean sandy soil irrigated with Treated wastewater (TWW) since 1980 was evaluated. The main soil properties (CEC, pH, size distribution, exchangeable cations and chloride, hydraulic conductivity) as well as the organic matter and Cu, Cr and Pb speciation in an irrigated soil and a non-irrigated control soil at various soil depths were monitored and compared during a 2 years experiment. In this first part, the evolution of the physico-chemical soil properties was described. The irrigation with TWW was beneficial with regard to water and nutrient supplying. All the exchangeable cations other than K + were higher in the irrigated soil than in the reference one. A part of the exchangeable cations was not fixed on the exchange complex but stored as labile salts or in concentrated soil solution. Despite the very sandy soil texture, both saturated and unsaturated hydraulic conductivity exhibited a significant diminution in the irrigated soil, but remained high enough to allow water percolation during rainy periods and subsequent leaching of accumulated salts, preventing soil salinization. In the irrigated soil, exchangeable sodium percentage (ESP) exhibited high values (20% on average) and the soil organic C was lower than in the reference. No significant effect was noticed on soil mineralogical composition due to irrigation.
ISSN:0883-2927
1872-9134
DOI:10.1016/j.apgeochem.2010.08.018