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Gypsum Provides Potential Benefits

Source Publication:Prairie Farmer
Primary Author:Prairie Farmer Staff
State:Not State Specific
Date/Year:2011
Focus:Gypsum Description
Category:Popular Press Articles
Crop:Not Crop Specific
Reported Results:

A growing body of research shows that applying gypsum to agricultural land offers many potential benefits to soil and water quality and crop productivity. Gypsum was the focus of the Midwest Soil Improvement Symposium: Research and Practical Insights into Using Gypsum held August 23 at the University of Wisconsin Arlington Ag Research Station. Co-sponsors for the event included the UW College of Agriculture and Life Sciences ; UW-Extension; the Conservation Technology Information Center and GYPSOIL.

Research indicates that gypsum makes soils more permeable to rainfall, alleviates aluminum toxicity and supplies soils with calcium and sulfur, an often-depleted soil nutrient. Gypsum applications also improve particle aggregation, reduce erosion and have been shown to help keep phosphorus and other nutrients from running off agricultural fields.

In addition to research findings, application recommendations and background on the production of gypsum in flue gas desulfurization systems at certain coal fired utility plants was presented. Information documenting the safety of FGD gypsum use in agriculture was also presented.

Saving soil, nutrients

USDA Agricultural Research Service soil scientist Dr. Darrell Norton outlined findings from his comprehensive evaluations of gypsum's impact on soil erosion, nutrient runoff, sediment loading, water infiltration and surface cracking.  He is a researcher at the ARS National Soil Erosion Research Lab in West Fayette, IN.

Norton found in a series of rainfall simulator experiments that soil loss is reduced by more than 50 percent when gypsum is applied at a rate of one ton per acre.  He explained that gypsum prevents soil particles from detaching during rainfall events and being lost in surface water runoff.

Keeping soil in place has huge environmental impacts. "Sediment is the number one source of pollution in water," said Norton, highlighting problems with sediment loading in the Maumee River Basin in Western Lake Erie in OH and Lower Fox River Watershed in Green Bay in WI.

Norton also discussed research findings showing gypsum significantly reduces runoff and also soluble phosphorus levels in topsoil.  Studies in Wisconsin, Alabama and Georgia point to similar results.

Symposium panelist Rodney Rulon, a corn and soybean grower who uses gypsum on his family's 6000-acre no-till operation in Arcadia, IN, emphasized both the environmental and agronomic significance of avoiding soil and water losses.

"There is a cost to everything that leaves your farm, whether it runs off the top, or through a tile,' Rulon said. "Keeping water for the plant has a benefit to the yield. Keeping water from running off and carrying soil  -- you can't replace that organic matter easily. And fertilizer is terribly expensive -- there is no reason to let it leave our farm."

Rulon says gypsum is an important tool in his no-till management system, which also includes the use of cover crops and an intense nutrient management system for manure generated at his family's 500-sow, farrow-to-finish swine operation. "We have incorporated gypsum as part of a system," said Rulon. "It really seems to be working well and our soil quality and sustainability is improving."

Sulfur supplement

Dr. Warren Dick, a longtime gypsum researcher and professor in Environmental and Natural Resources at The Ohio State University, Wooster, OH, presented several research reports where gypsum, used as a sulfur source, raised yields in a variety of crops including corn, soybeans, alfalfa.

Dick highlighted a 2003 study showing corn response to gypsum that supplied sulfur at a rate of 30 lbs./acre. "We increased the yield from 182 bu./acre to 193," said Dick.

His research also suggests that response to sulfur and nitrogen use efficiency are correlated. "If you don't satisfy the sulfur nutrient part of the crop it can't really use the nitrogen part either," Dick said.

Dick also shared results from several alfalfa studies showing the benefit of using gypsum to improve forage yield and quality, including cumulative 2000-2002 data from an OSU study showing an 18% increase in alfalfa tonnage in a gypsum-treated field vs. the control with no gypsum. "Gypsum is an excellent source of sulfur," said Dick.

No-till operator Nick Miller uses gypsum to help decrease compaction, maximize moisture availability and raise yields at his family's Oconomowoc, WI, 3600-acre farm.

Miller told the symposium audience of roughly 190 crop consultants, researchers, extension advisors, agronomy specialists and growers that he has seen immediate improvements in soybean yields in fields where gypsum was used. He and his family have applied FGD gypsum at a rate of one ton/acre per year on much of their ground beginning in the fall of 2009.

Results have been dramatic, according to Miller. In one soybean field, the Miller's ten-year average yield was 40-45 bushels/acre before gypsum was applied. After a single gypsum application, yield in the same field was 65 bu./acre, according to Miller. He attributes the dramatic soybean yield increase to the 13-18% sulfur supplied by the gypsum.

Fighting aluminum toxicity and soil structure problems

Dr. Harry Schomberg, a soil researcher at the USDA Agricultural Research Service in Watkinsville, GA, explained that gypsum mitigates the toxic aluminum layer often found in heavily weathered type soils common in the south.

"If you apply gypsum (calcium sulfate dihydrate), calcium moves the aluminum down in that profile and you can get roots growing further down, taking up nutrients and you get bigger plants," Schomberg said.

Miller says he is seeing soil structure changes in his fields, especially in areas where ponding has been prevalent. "We had a 50-acre field where we hadn't been able to have a crop in the low area in the last three years due to (standing) water. With one application of gypsum, the water filtrated through and the roots got air," Miller said. He said the soybeans yielded 110 bushels in the low spot.

Rulon also recalls dramatic evidence of positive changes in soil structure. He says color, tilth, and texture of his soils are vastly different from what he observed when he was using a more conventional system. "The soil doesn't look the same as it did," says Rulon.

Application tips

Ron Chamberlain, director of gypsum programs for Beneficial Reuse Management, marketers of GYPSOIL brand gypsum, presented several gypsum application tips, including handling and spreading methods, application timing and rate recommendations.

Chamberlain recommended applying gypsum with a fertilizer or litter spreader, ideally equipped with a stainless steel box with steep sides (45 degree angles) and a wide belt.Twin spinners are important to ensure a wide, uniform spread pattern. In absence of a stainless steel box, graphite film coating or plastic liners can be used to assure the gypsum slides easily onto the belt. Because particle size is so small, gypsum can bridge if equipment isn't set properly. Care should also be taken when storing to avoid moisture saturation with rainfall.

When is the best time to apply it? "Apply anytime it is appropriate to be in the field without damaging the field or crop with the application equipment," Chamberlain explained.

Rates are typically 300 to 500 lbs. per acre for sulfur supplementation and one to two tons per acre every one to two years for soil amendment, according to Chamberlain. He said delivered and spread price on gypsum is between $25 and $45/ton.

For more information about the Midwest Soil Improvement Symposium and gypsum, visit www.gypsoil.com.

Gypsoil's mission is to make a positive impact in our customers' soil while conserving natural resources and protecting the environment.

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