Increasing agricultural soil phosphate (P) status influences water P levels in paddy farming areas: Their implication on environmental quality

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Date
2022-10-03Author
Mng’ong’o, Marco
Munishi, Linus
Ndakidemi, Patrick
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ntensive paddy farming activities involve higher use of irrigation water and agrochemicals to increase crop
productivity per unit area. However, a practice may result in environmental challenges due to nutrient loss and
agro-chemicals contamination from agricultural fields. The present study characterized the relationship between
agricultural soil phosphate (P) status and P levels in water bodies in Usangu agro-ecosystem (UA), the area
famous for paddy rice production in Southern Highland Tanzania. The studied soil pH ranged from 6.4 to 7.6,
while water pH was 4.9–6.8, which varied among study sites and negatively correlated to each other. This study
found a positive correlation between P concentration (P < 0.001, R2 = 0.78) in agricultural soils and water
samples in the study area, where P in soil were 1.66–17.56 mg/kg and 0.02–1.65 mg/L in water. This correlation
pattern of P in soil and water indicates that increased P content in farming areas under poor management
(flooding system of irrigation), as observed in the study area likely to influence increased levels of P in water
bodies leading to water eutrophications, but also reducing the land productivity per unit area. The significant P
enrichment (>1.65 mg/L) from agricultural fields to water bodies found in different water samples from irri-
gation schemes potentially leads to eutrophication. To sustainably manage P concentration in water bodies and
increase land productivity per unit area, the hotspot for P loss to water bodies in the agro-ecosystem has to be
identified and managed, but also flooding irrigation system standard in the study area has to be abandoned to
reduce plant nutrient loss and contamination of water bodies.
URI
https://doi.org/10.1016/j.cscee.2022.100259https://dspace.nm-aist.ac.tz/handle/20.500.12479/2935