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By Jerry Spencer in Consultancy on 6th Dec 2007 20:20

PART 1

ETPIncreasingly a large number of golf courses and other amenity turf areas are using effluent water for irrigation. The result of utilizing this water source is that the effects of excess soluble salts can become apparent on turfgrass areas. As a direct result of this water analysis and periodic monitoring have thus become key components of sound irrigation management.

Water analysis by a commercial laboratory provides data on many parameters, some of which are of little significance for turfgrassSewage effluent water before and after AFM filtrationSewage effluent water before and after AFM filtration irrigation. The most important parameters for turfgrass management are total concentration of soluble salts (salinity); sodium (Na) content; relative proportion of sodium to calcium (Ca) and magnesium(Mg) (Sodium Adsorption Ratio or SAR); chloride (Cl), boron (B), bicarbonate(HCO3), and carbonate (CO3) content; and pH.

Other parameters that you are likely to find on a water test report and that you should review are nutrient content (nitrogen, phosphorus, and potassium), chlorine content, suspended solids, and turbidity, though none of these by itself plays a major role in determining the suitability of water for irrigation.

IMPORTANT TEST PARAMETERS
Salinity. All irrigation waters contain some dissolved mineral salts and chemicals. Some soluble salts are identified as nutrients and are beneficial to turfgrass growth (such as N, P, K etc; others may be phytotoxic or may become so when present in high concentrations. The rate at which salts accumulate to undesirable levels in a soil depends on their concentration in the irrigation water, the amount of water applied annually, annual precipitation (rain plus snow), and the soil’s physical and chemical characteristics.

Different laboratories report water salinity in different ways: as Total Dissolved Solids (TDS) measured in parts per million (ppm) or milligrams per liter (mg/L), or as electrical conductivity (ECw) measured in millimhos per centimetre (mmhos/cm), micromhos per centimetre (µmhos/cm), decisiemens per metre (dS/m), or siemens per metre

Some labs may also report the individual components of salinity (e.g., sodium) in milliequivalents per litre (meq/L). You can use the following equations to convert results from one set of units to another, and so compare data from differently formatted reports:
(1) 1 ppm = 1 mg/L
(2) 1 mg/L = meq/L x Equivalent Weight (see Table 1)

Table 1. Conversion factors for mg/L and meq/L

 

To convert

To convert

 

mg/L to meq/L

meq/L to mg/L

Constituent

multiply by

multiply by

 

 

 

Sodium (Na)

0.043

23

Calcium (Ca)

0.050

20

Magnesium (Mg)

0.083

12

Bicarbonate

0.016

61

Carbonate

0.033

30

Chloride (Cl)

0.029

35


(3) 1 mmho/cm = 1 dS/m = 1,000 µmhos/cm = 0.1 S/m
(4) ECw (mmhos/cmor dS/m) x 640 = TDS (ppm or mg/L)

effluent water Note that the 640 value is a general average factor and may require adjustment in special circumstances. For example, waters containing substantial amounts of sulphate require a higher conversion factor.

Most water that is acceptable for turfgrass irrigation contains from 200 to 800 ppm soluble salts. Soluble salt levels greater than 2,000 ppm may injure turfgrass; salt levels up to 2,000 ppm may be tolerated by some turfgrass species (Table 2), but only on soils with exceptional permeability and subsoil drainage. Good permeability and drainage allow a turfgrass manager to leach excessive salts from the root zone by periodically applying heavy irrigations of more desirable water such as that from a town water supply. Sand-based sport fields and golf greens have the proper soil structure for this form of salinity management. (It should be noted that irrigation water with a very low salt content [i.e., below 0.2 dS/m] can actually reduce the permeability of a soil. Such water can disperse clay particles, which then clog large soil pores that are important for good permeability.)

Table 2. Relative tolerances of Australian turfgrass species to soil salinity (ECe)

 

 

 

 

Sensitive

(<3 dS/m)

Moderately sensitive

(3 to 6 dS/m)

Moderately tolerant

(6 to 10 dS/m)

Tolerant

(>10 dS/m)

Poa annua

Annual ryegrass

Perennial ryegrass

Bermudagrasses

Colonial bentgrass

Creeping bentgrass

Tall fescue

 

Kentucky bluegrass

Fine-leaf fescues

 

 

 

Buffalograss

 

 

 

 

 

 

From:M.A.Harivandi,J.D.Butler,and L.Wu.1992.Salinity and turfgrass culture. In D.V.Waddington,R.N.Carrow,and

R.C.Shearman (eds.) Turfgrass,pp.207–229.Series No.32.Madison:American Society of Agronomy.




PART 2 Click Here

PART 3 Click Here
Part 4 CLick Here

Read more articles in Consultancy, by Jerry Spencer or from December 2007.



John Deere

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