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Compost Amendment to Control Runoff From Turf Rob Harrison Univ of Washington Rob Harrison Ecosystem Sciences.

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Presentation on theme: "Compost Amendment to Control Runoff From Turf Rob Harrison Univ of Washington Rob Harrison Ecosystem Sciences."— Presentation transcript:

1 Compost Amendment to Control Runoff From Turf Rob Harrison Univ of Washington Rob Harrison RobH@u.washington.edu http://128.95.36.3/robh Ecosystem Sciences Division College of Forest Resources University of Washington Seattle WA 98185 USA Phil Cohen, Bruce Jensen, Kyle Kolsti, Steve Burgess, Mark Grey and Chuck Henry

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3 Big Problems: Rob Harrison Univ of Washington Lake Sammamish is increasingly polluted and subject to eutrophication P in runoff is considered the problem

4 direct sources of P: soil erosion human and animal waste fertilizers lower infiltration of water aggravating problems: increased peak runoff septic tanks

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6 “turf on till” phenomenon on Alderwood and related soil types aggravating problems: highest native P soil concentrations in the U.S. lack of permanence in turf establishment large amounts of water used to establish and maintain turf

7 turf industry estimates that... did you know? 18 $billion per year spent on turf establishment and maintenance growth rate for industry is 35% per year very little recycled material is used,but use is growing rapidly 1) 2) 3)

8 increase water percolation primary needs: decrease erosion and runoff reduce use of phosphorus fertilizer

9 establish plots to turf approach: run natural and manmade storm events evaluate runoff 1) total amounts 2) periodicity 3) chemistry

10 sites:

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14 changes in soil:

15 Event Collection Periods

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17 May 25-26, 1995 two storm events total storage (liters)

18 May 25-26, 1995 two storm events total storage (liters)

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22 May 25-26, 1995 two storm events

23 May 31-June 3, 1995 two storm events

24 Conclusions: Rob Harrison Univ of Washington Compost amendment increased water retention in soil and lag times of response to storms, though antecedent conditions are important Compost amendment appears to be a permanent improvement, not so with inorganic fertilizer amendment Total P runoff from compost-amended sites was less, though P concentrations were sometimes higher

25 Future directions: Rob Harrison Univ of Washington What are implications on a watershed basis? Will the properties of the unamended site improve with time? Is the compost treatment permanent?


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