Differing Phosphorus Crop Availability of Aluminium and Calcium Precipitated Dairy Processing Sludge Potential Recycled Alternatives to Mineral Phosphorus Fertiliser

The European dairy industry generates large volumes of wastewater from milk and dairy food processing. Removal of phosphorus (P) by complexing with metal (e.g., aluminium, calcium) cations in P rich sludge is a potential P source for agricultural reuse and P recycling. However, there is a significan...

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Main Authors: S.M. Ashekuzzaman, Owen Fenton, Erik Meers, Patrick J. Forrestal
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: MDPI AG 2021-02-01
Series:Agronomy
Subjects:
Online Access:https://www.mdpi.com/2073-4395/11/3/427
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spelling doaj-d94a8ad693d54aa490a1bfc502ef68b12021-04-02T20:31:47ZengMDPI AGAgronomy2073-43952021-02-011142742710.3390/agronomy11030427Differing Phosphorus Crop Availability of Aluminium and Calcium Precipitated Dairy Processing Sludge Potential Recycled Alternatives to Mineral Phosphorus FertiliserS.M. Ashekuzzaman0Owen Fenton1Erik Meers2Patrick J. Forrestal3Teagasc, Environment Research Centre, Johnstown Castle, Co. Wexford Y35 HP22, IrelandTeagasc, Environment Research Centre, Johnstown Castle, Co. Wexford Y35 HP22, IrelandDepartment of Green Chemistry and Technology, Faculty of Bioscience Engineering, Ghent University, Coupure links 653, 9000 Ghent, BelgiumTeagasc, Environment Research Centre, Johnstown Castle, Co. Wexford Y35 HP22, IrelandThe European dairy industry generates large volumes of wastewater from milk and dairy food processing. Removal of phosphorus (P) by complexing with metal (e.g., aluminium, calcium) cations in P rich sludge is a potential P source for agricultural reuse and P recycling. However, there is a significant knowledge gap concerning the plant availability of this complexed P in comparison to conventional mineral P fertiliser. The current absence of information on plant P bioavailability of dairy processing sludge (DPS) limits the ability of farmers and nutrient management advisors to incorporate it correctly into fertiliser programmes. The present study examined the most common types of dairy sludge—(1) aluminium-precipitated sludge (“Al-DPS”) and 2) calcium-precipitated lime-stabilised sludge (“Ca-DPS”) at field scale to assess P availability in grassland versus mineral P fertiliser over a growing season. The experimental design was a randomised complete block with five replications. Crop yield and P uptake were assessed for 4 harvests. The initial soil test P was at a low level and the experimental treatments were super phosphate at 15, 30, 40, 50 and 60 kg P ha<sup>−1</sup>, two dairy sludge applied at 40 kg P ha<sup>−1</sup> (comparison was made with mineral P at same application rate) and a zero P control applied in a single application at the beginning of the growing season. Results showed a significant positive slope in the relationship between P uptake response and mineral P application rate indicating the suitability of the experimental site for P availability assessment. The P bioavailability of Al- and Ca-DPS varied greatly between treatments. The P fertiliser replacement value based on the 1st harvest was 50 and 16% increased to 109 and 31% cumulatively over the four harvests for Al- and Ca-DPS, respectively. The Al concentration in Al-DPS did not limit P bioavailability, but low P bioavailability from Ca-DPS can be associated with its high Ca content that can lead to formation of low soluble Ca-P compounds at alkaline pH conditions with a high Ca/P ratio. These findings show that P availability from dairy sludge can be quite different depending on treatment process. Consequently, it is critical to have P availability information as well as total P content available to ensure the application rate meets crop requirements without creating environmental risk by over application.https://www.mdpi.com/2073-4395/11/3/427dairy processing sludgephosphorus bioavailabilitycrop yieldfertiliser replacement valuegrasslandsoil test P
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author S.M. Ashekuzzaman
Owen Fenton
Erik Meers
Patrick J. Forrestal
spellingShingle S.M. Ashekuzzaman
Owen Fenton
Erik Meers
Patrick J. Forrestal
Differing Phosphorus Crop Availability of Aluminium and Calcium Precipitated Dairy Processing Sludge Potential Recycled Alternatives to Mineral Phosphorus Fertiliser
Agronomy
dairy processing sludge
phosphorus bioavailability
crop yield
fertiliser replacement value
grassland
soil test P
author_facet S.M. Ashekuzzaman
Owen Fenton
Erik Meers
Patrick J. Forrestal
author_sort S.M. Ashekuzzaman
title Differing Phosphorus Crop Availability of Aluminium and Calcium Precipitated Dairy Processing Sludge Potential Recycled Alternatives to Mineral Phosphorus Fertiliser
title_short Differing Phosphorus Crop Availability of Aluminium and Calcium Precipitated Dairy Processing Sludge Potential Recycled Alternatives to Mineral Phosphorus Fertiliser
title_full Differing Phosphorus Crop Availability of Aluminium and Calcium Precipitated Dairy Processing Sludge Potential Recycled Alternatives to Mineral Phosphorus Fertiliser
title_fullStr Differing Phosphorus Crop Availability of Aluminium and Calcium Precipitated Dairy Processing Sludge Potential Recycled Alternatives to Mineral Phosphorus Fertiliser
title_full_unstemmed Differing Phosphorus Crop Availability of Aluminium and Calcium Precipitated Dairy Processing Sludge Potential Recycled Alternatives to Mineral Phosphorus Fertiliser
title_sort differing phosphorus crop availability of aluminium and calcium precipitated dairy processing sludge potential recycled alternatives to mineral phosphorus fertiliser
publisher MDPI AG
series Agronomy
issn 2073-4395
publishDate 2021-02-01
description The European dairy industry generates large volumes of wastewater from milk and dairy food processing. Removal of phosphorus (P) by complexing with metal (e.g., aluminium, calcium) cations in P rich sludge is a potential P source for agricultural reuse and P recycling. However, there is a significant knowledge gap concerning the plant availability of this complexed P in comparison to conventional mineral P fertiliser. The current absence of information on plant P bioavailability of dairy processing sludge (DPS) limits the ability of farmers and nutrient management advisors to incorporate it correctly into fertiliser programmes. The present study examined the most common types of dairy sludge—(1) aluminium-precipitated sludge (“Al-DPS”) and 2) calcium-precipitated lime-stabilised sludge (“Ca-DPS”) at field scale to assess P availability in grassland versus mineral P fertiliser over a growing season. The experimental design was a randomised complete block with five replications. Crop yield and P uptake were assessed for 4 harvests. The initial soil test P was at a low level and the experimental treatments were super phosphate at 15, 30, 40, 50 and 60 kg P ha<sup>−1</sup>, two dairy sludge applied at 40 kg P ha<sup>−1</sup> (comparison was made with mineral P at same application rate) and a zero P control applied in a single application at the beginning of the growing season. Results showed a significant positive slope in the relationship between P uptake response and mineral P application rate indicating the suitability of the experimental site for P availability assessment. The P bioavailability of Al- and Ca-DPS varied greatly between treatments. The P fertiliser replacement value based on the 1st harvest was 50 and 16% increased to 109 and 31% cumulatively over the four harvests for Al- and Ca-DPS, respectively. The Al concentration in Al-DPS did not limit P bioavailability, but low P bioavailability from Ca-DPS can be associated with its high Ca content that can lead to formation of low soluble Ca-P compounds at alkaline pH conditions with a high Ca/P ratio. These findings show that P availability from dairy sludge can be quite different depending on treatment process. Consequently, it is critical to have P availability information as well as total P content available to ensure the application rate meets crop requirements without creating environmental risk by over application.
topic dairy processing sludge
phosphorus bioavailability
crop yield
fertiliser replacement value
grassland
soil test P
url https://www.mdpi.com/2073-4395/11/3/427
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