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The seasonal influence of olive mill wastewater applications on an orchard soil under semi‐arid conditions
Author(s) -
Steinmetz Zacharias,
Kurtz Markus Peter,
Dag Ar,
Zipori Isaac,
Schaumann Gabriele Ellen
Publication year - 2015
Publication title -
journal of plant nutrition and soil science
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.644
H-Index - 87
eISSN - 1522-2624
pISSN - 1436-8730
DOI - 10.1002/jpln.201400658
Subject(s) - orchard , irrigation , wastewater , leaching (pedology) , nutrient , chemistry , leaching model , environmental science , agronomy , fertigation , soil water , fertilizer , soil fertility , environmental engineering , soil science , biology , organic chemistry
Olive oil production generates large amounts of olive mill wastewater (OMW). OMW has a high nutrient content and could serve as fertilizer, but its fatty and phenolic constituents induce soil water repellency, phytotoxicity, and acidification. An appropriate season of OMW application may mitigate negative consequences while preserving beneficial effects. In order to investigate this, a field study was conducted, in which OMW was applied to an olive orchard in Israel either in winter or summer. Soil–water interactions (water drop penetration time, hydraulic conductivity), soil physicochemical parameters, phenolic compounds, and soil biological activity (bait‐lamina test) were determined 12 to 18 months after OMW application. The results showed elevated K + contents in all treatments, but all other soil properties of winter treatments were comparable to the control, which suggested a certain recovery potential of the soil when OMW is applied in winter. By contrast, summer treatments revealed a ten‐fold higher soil water repellency, a three‐times lower biological activity, and a four‐fold higher content of phenolic compounds, independently of whether the soil was kept moist by irrigation or not. Thus, the OMW constituents were neither degraded nor leached by winter rain when applied during the hot season. Further research is needed to distinguish leaching and biodegradation effects, and to understand the development of the composition and degradation kinetics of organic OMW constituents.

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