8 results match your criteria: "Univ. of Winnipeg[Affiliation]"

Anaerobic conditions developed during flooding can increase phosphorus (P) losses from soils to waterways. Soil amendment with gypsum (CaSO ·2H O) can effectively reduce flooding-induced P release, but its effectiveness is soil dependent, and the reasons are poorly understood. The objectives of this study were to reveal the possible inorganic P transformations during flooding of two soils (acidic-Neuenberg sandy loam [NBG-SL] and alkaline-Fyala clay [FYL-Cl]), with and without gypsum amendment prior to flooding.

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Enhanced release of phosphorus (P) from soils with snowmelt flooding poses a threat of eutrophication to waterbodies in cold climatic regions. Reductions in P losses with various soil amendments has been reported, however effectiveness of MgSO has not been studied under snowmelt flooding. This study examined (a) the P release enhancement with flooding in relation to initial soil P status and (b) the effectiveness of MgSO at two rates in reducing P release to floodwater under simulated snowmelt flooding.

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Cold agricultural regions are getting warmer and experiencing shifts in precipitation patterns, which affect hydrological transport of nutrients through reduced snowpack and higher annual proportions of summer rainfall. Previous work has demonstrated that the timing of phosphorus (P) concentrations is regionally coherent in streams of the northern Great Plains, suggesting a common climatic driver. There has been less investigation into patterns of stream nitrogen (N), despite its importance for water quality.

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Mastcam-Z is a multispectral, stereoscopic imaging investigation on the Mars 2020 mission's rover. Mastcam-Z consists of a pair of focusable, 4:1 zoomable cameras that provide broadband red/green/blue and narrowband 400-1000 nm color imaging with fields of view from 25.6° × 19.

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Enhanced phosphorus (P) release from flooded, anaerobic soils has been extensively studied under summer temperatures but not under cold temperatures with intermittent freeze-thaw events. We investigated the temperature and freeze-thaw effects during flooding on the release of P to floodwater from soil monoliths (15-cm depth) collected from eight agricultural fields in Manitoba. Soil monoliths were flooded with reverse osmosis water and incubated for 56 d under simulated summer flooding (SSF; 22 ± 1 °C) or snowmelt flooding with intermittent freeze-thaw (IFT; 4 ± 1 °C with intermittent freezing) in triplicates.

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Anaerobic conditions developed in soils with flooding can enhance the release of soil P to overlying water, but little information is available for soils with a long history of manure application. We examined the P release from manure-amended soils under simulated snowmelt flooding. Intact monoliths from manured (solid swine manure [SSM] or liquid swine manure [LSM]) and unamended (control) field plots were collected from Carman, Manitoba.

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Increased phosphorus (P) availability under flooded, anaerobic conditions may accelerate P loss from soils to water bodies. Existing knowledge on P release to floodwater from flooded soils is limited to summer conditions and/or room temperatures. Spring snowmelt runoff, which occurs under cold temperatures with frequent freeze-thaw events, is the dominant mode of P loss from agricultural lands to water bodies in the Canadian Prairies.

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The risk of P loss from manured soils is more related to P fractions than total P concentration in manure. This study examined the impact of manure P fractions on P losses from liquid swine manure- (LSM), solid cattle manure- (SCM), and monoammonium phosphate- (MAP) treated soils. Manure or fertilizer was applied at 50 mg P kg soil, mixed, and incubated at 20°C for 6 wk to simulate the interaction between applied P and soil when P is applied well in advance of a high risk period for runoff.

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