Title: Turfgrass Growth and Water Use in Gypsum-Treated Ultisols
1Turfgrass Growth and Water Use in Gypsum-Treated
Ultisols
- M.J. Schlossberg
- Penn State University
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3Turfgrass and the SE US
- Bermudagrass and Tall Fescue dominate the
landscape of the US Southern Piedmont (GA, AL,
and the Carolinas)
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6Turfgrass and the SE US
- Interestingly
- Bermudagrass and Tall Fescue are the two
turfgrasses recognized for generating the most
deeply-extending root systems of ALL turfgrass
species.
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8Turf-type tall fescue roots
Soil chemical or soil physical problem?
Gypsum
Control
0-3.5 3.6-7 7-11
9Treatment Options???
- Lime
- Agricultural grade limestone is an effective
ameliorant of soil acidity - Commonly incorporated at establishment for
production of cotton, soybean, corn, peanuts,
etc. - INCORPORATE is the key word, effective treatment
of soil acidity with lime requires tillage into
the soil profile
10How Do Turf Managers Like Incorporating Lime?
11How Do Turf Managers Like Incorporating Lime?
- They dont. Turfgrasses are perennial in nature
and establishment is not only uncommon, but
dreaded! - So how can managers ameliorate the effects of
acidity without plowing the lawn?
12Gypsum
- Many attributes
- More soluble than agricultural lime
- Doesnt require tillage or coring
- Doesnt raise pH of the surface soil
- This can cause soil structure and turf disease
problems - Provides sulfate (SO4), the plant essential
nutrient form of sulfur
13Hydroponic experiment
14Tall fescue root growth in Al solutions
15Fescue columns (33cm)
16Tall fescue root growth column study
c
c
b
b
b
b
a
a
a
17Greenhouse Experiment Objectives
- 1. Construct columns which represent soil
profiles indigenous to the SE US. - 2. Analyze leachate to confirm calcium sulfate
penetration of subsoil, displacement of Al,
and/or other soil chemistry alterations. - 3. Use installed instrumentation to monitor water
- extraction from acidic subsoil by roots, by
depth. - 4. Simulate drought periods repetitively
mimicking rain patterns, while promoting deep
rooting in columns - 5. Analyze columns to assess root architecture
and calcium saturation of CEC by soil depth.
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19Experimental Design
- Acidic B Horizon Clay
- pH w(11) 4.9
- Exch. Acid 3.9 meq/100g
- Mehlich III (M3) exchangeable
- Phosphorus (P) 2.0 lbs/A
- Potassium (K) 0.04 meq
- Magnesium (Mg) 0.25 meq
- Calcium (Ca) 0.65 meq
- Total CEC 4.84 meq
8 cm
54 cm
20Experimental Design
- Acidic B Horizon Clay
- pH w(11) 4.9
- Exch. Acid 3.9 meq/100g
- Mehlich III (M3) exchangeable
- Phosphorus (P) 2.0 lbs/A
- Potassium (K) 0.04 meq
- Magnesium (Mg) 0.25 meq
- Calcium (Ca) 0.65 meq
- Total CEC 4.84 meq
21Experimental Design
22Experimental Design
- Treatments (5)
- Synthetic/FGD Gypsum (Southern Co.)
- Tech. Grade Gypsum (CaSO42H2O)
- Calcium Chloride (CaCl22H2O)
- Calcitic Lime (100 CCE)
- Control
- 90 columns total 60 Bermudagrass (Princess or
Sultan) and 30 turf-type Tall Fescue Rebel - Half of each instrumented for real-time soil
moisture, three replications of six
23Experimental Design
- The Southern Co. SynGyp, is generated by a wet
spray-dryer scrubbing process, and contains 23.3
Ca by mass (/- 0.65), and has a calcium
carbonate equivalency of 2.7 (/- 0.14). Trace
element and heavy metal analysis show few
impurities
24Experimental Design
- The Southern Co. SynGyp is 23.3 Ca by mass (/-
0.65), and has a calcium carbonate equivalency of
2.7 (/- 0.14). Trace element and heavy metal
analysis show few impurities - Application Rates
- Treatment lbs/Acre (Ca)
- Lime 4,332 (1,735)
- FGD and TG Gypsum 13,796 (3,224)
- CaCl2 11,825 (3,224)
25Experimental Design
- The Southern Co. SynGyp is 23.3 Ca by mass (/-
0.65), and has a calcium carbonate equivalency of
2.7 (/- 0.14). Trace element and heavy metal
analysis show few impurities - Application Rates
- Treatment Mg/ha (Ca)
- Lime 4.86 (1.94)
- FGD and TG Gypsum 15.46 (3.61)
- CaCl2 13.25 (3.61)
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27Cultural Methods
- TF columns mowed every 93 days _at_ 3 height
- No signs/symptoms of pest activity observed over
the 2-year study, hence no pesticides were
applied (tall fescue is good like that) - When gthalf the TF columns showed stunted growth
leaf firing, all were irrigated with 4 in 1
pulses over 24 hours (every 20-35 days) - Post-estab ¼ lb N K2O / 1000 ft2 / month
28Cultural Methods
- Bermudagrass columns mowed every 73 days _at_ 1.4
height - Insect activity was chemically controlled when
necessary - When gthalf the bermuda columns showed stunted
growth/dormancy, all were irrigated with 4 in 1
pulses over 24 hours (every 30-50 days) - Post-estab ¾ lb N K2O / 1000 ft2 / month
29Leachate chemistry and composition
30Solute transport through 54 cm of red clay, by
time after treatment
31Aluminum concentration in leachate, by time after
treatment
32Calcium concentration in leachate, by time after
treatment
33Sulfur concentration in leachate, by time after
treatment
34Magnesium concentration in leachate, by time
after treatment
35Potassium concentration in leachate, by time
after treatment
36Soil nutrient levels by depth
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40Leaf/shoot biomass production(generally
analogous with quality/vigor)
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44Turfgrass water useby soil depth
45Tall Fescue H2O-use by depth over (14) 10-35 d
dry down periods
cm water / day
46Turfgrass nutrient concentration and uptake
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51Visual qualityorpercent green coverage
52Princess Bermudagrass Overlay Representing
Turf (60 days after planting, DAP)
Of the 3.8 x 106 pixels in this image, 881,598
are green, exactly 23.2
53Princess Bermudagrass Sultan Bermudagrass 300
DAP 300 DAP
54Princess Bermudagrass Green Cover
55Princess Bermudagrass Green Cover
56Princess Bermudagrass Green Cover
a
a
b
a
b
b
57 Green Cover by Treatment of Bermudagrasses in
Drought Stress
- Princess and Sultan Green
Cover - Gypsums v.
- Control 9.0
- Lime 7.2
- All others 21.6
- FGD v.
- Control 6.0
- All others 17.2
58Turfgrass root growth by soil depth
59Tall Fescue root length in the 38 62 soil depths
60Greenhouse Study Summary
- Gypsum trts effectively penetrated 60 cm of clay
soil 1 year after a 7 ton/A application - Differences between mined synthetic gyp were
slight, allowing pooled analysis - Benefits to TF were stark enhanced growth, total
deep water uptake, deep roots, and leaf S
compared to both Lime and Con trts (with no
resulting base cation deficiencies) - Benefits to bermudagrass include enhanced growth
color response under drought conditions (deeper
roots?)
61Griffin field experiment
62Griffin field experiment
- Turf
- Bermuda
- Zoysia
- Bentgrass
- Treatments
- Control
- Lime
- Gypsum (low and high)
- Lime gypsum (low and high)
63TDR soil moisture meter rods
64Soil profile beneath zoysia
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66Turf field demonstrations
usace.army.mil/
67Lane Creek Athens, GA
- Piedmont region
- Heavy red clay
- Acidic soil
- Bermudagrass
68The Farm Dalton, GA
- Ridge and Valley
- Yellow clay
- Neutral soil
- Zoysiagrass
69Waterfall Clayton, GA
- Blue Ridge Mtns
- Rocky, thin soil
- Acidic
- Bentgrass
70Grand Hotel Mobile Bay
- Coastal Plain
- Sandy soil
- Close to neutral
- Bermudagrass
71Musgrove Jasper, AL
- Ridge and Valley
- Yellow clay
- Acidic soil
- Bermudagrass
72Chateau Elan Buford, GA
- Piedmont region
- Heavy red clay
- Acidic soil
- Bermudagrass
73UGA soccer fields Athens
- Piedmont region
- Heavy red clay
- Acidic soil
- Bermudagrass
74Taqueta Falls Lookout Mtn.
- Ridge and Valley
- Yellow clay
- Acidic soil
- Bermudagrass
75Grapevine researchChateau Elan
76Full Size Pilot Study, Apr 04
- East Lake G.C., Atlanta GA
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79Root sampling
80Effect of Gypsum Addition on Root Growth at East
Lake Golf Club
Control
Gypsum Treatment
- Gypsum treatment 4 tons/acre, April 11, 2005
- Samples collected May 19, 2006
81Summary
- Large (gt5 ton) gypsum apps to turfgrass did not
induce salt or phytotoxic injury - More significant advantages of gypsum
applications are associated with turfgrasses
poorly adapted to weathered, acid soils - Continuing turfgrass root analysis should
demonstrate advantages of increased CaAl ratio
in acid subsoils - Leaf Ca and S were not always correlated to root
length and water use benefits
82Acknowledgements
- Lamar Larrimore, Southern Company
- Dr. Bill Miller, University of Georgia
- Dr. John Kruse, University of Georgia
- Dr. Malcom Sumner, University of Georgia
- Michael Wolfe, Southern Company