Persistence of municipal biosolids in a Chihuahuan Desert rangeland 18 years after application

TitlePersistence of municipal biosolids in a Chihuahuan Desert rangeland 18 years after application
Publication TypeJournal Article
Year of Publication2001
AuthorsWalton M., Herrick JE, Gibbens, Robert P., Remmenga M.D.
JournalArid Land Research and Management
Volume15
Pagination223-232
Date PublishedJanuary 1, 2001
ARIS Log Number119158
Abstract

The experimental application of municipal biosolids to degraded arid and semi-arid rangelands has been practiced for many years and is becoming more common in the western United States. Previous studies have examined the effects of applying biosolids to land areas that have been degraded by one or more different factors including overgrazing, fire suppression, and increased drought frequency, duration, or intensity. However, few of these studies have measured the persistence of biosolids in the soil. This study is an attempt to recover information from an abandoned reclamation effort in which municipal biosolids were spread on a degraded rangeland on the Jornada Experimental Range in southern New Mexico. The biosolids were applied in 1979 and were still present in substantial amounts when soil samples were taken in 1997. An estimated 32% of the applied biosolids persisted as fragments greater than 2 mm in diameter for almost twenty years. There were no apparent benefits of biosolid application at this sit in terms of vegetation establishment within the first four years, and there was no correlation between vegetation patterns and the concentration of biosolids remaining in the soil in 1997. It is hypothesized that much of the applied sludge remains in the soil because of the recalcitrant nature of digested biosolids combined with the environmental conditions of soil in arid systems. Long-term results from biosolid addition experiments in arid and semi-arid rangelands should be considered before the practice is widely used for reclamation of degraded rangeland sites.

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