Can Use of Soil Health Principles Reduce Risk of Nitrate Leaching?
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Nitrogen is an important nutrient for crop yield and quality, but excess nitrogen can leach from fields creating contamination issues in groundwater and surface water supplies. To improve soil nutrient retention, many conservation groups and funding agencies are focused on building soil health in agricultural land. We present a framework for quantifying the benefits of soil health practices for mitigating groundwater nitrate, to provide a cost-effective method to promote nutrient use-efficiency and protect water supplies that would benefit many small/rural communities. Soil samples were collected using a grid-based, composite sampling approach in northeast Kansas in the fall and spring to assess eight large fields with a large variety of soil health. In comparison to more conventionally managed fields, fields with a history of cover crops and no-till agriculture had higher organic matter, soil respiration, microbial biomass, available carbon, and organic nitrogen; all of which are important for soil health. Additionally, fields with more soil health practices also had lower extractable nitrate in the fall and higher extractable nitrate in the spring, suggesting a lower potential for nitrate leaching in the fall and higher nitrate availability for plant uptake in the spring. Early results from these eight fields indicate soil respirable carbon, organic matter, available carbon, water extractable nitrogen forms could be good metrics to predict the potential for nitrate leaching. Use of soil health practices may increase nutrient storage through the winter, thus providing more nutrients in spring for crop growth and minimizing nutrient leaching.