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Use of Shrimp Sludge as a Soil Amendment for Tomatoes Chad King, Kevin Fitzsimmons, Dennis McIntosh Environmental Research Lab University of Arizona.

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Presentation on theme: "Use of Shrimp Sludge as a Soil Amendment for Tomatoes Chad King, Kevin Fitzsimmons, Dennis McIntosh Environmental Research Lab University of Arizona."— Presentation transcript:

1 Use of Shrimp Sludge as a Soil Amendment for Tomatoes Chad King, Kevin Fitzsimmons, Dennis McIntosh Environmental Research Lab University of Arizona

2 Purpose Determine feasibility of use of shrimp sludge from low salinity inland shrimp culture as a soil amendment. Apply sludge at disposal rates, not to meet plant requirements. Provide a use or disposal for a current waste product Reduce the potential for farm erosion, nutrient leaching/loss

3 Research Design Collected and dried fresh sludge from a shrimp farm in western Arizona, USA Treatments of 5, 10 and 20% sludge application by volume, 402, 805 and 1,610 g/plant Mechanically mixed shrimp sludge and potting soil mix (concrete sand, mulch, vermiculite) Randomly transplanted and arranged 28 ‘Roma’ tomato starts in a greenhouse, one plant per pot Each plant received 4 L of water daily, over four applications by drip irrigation Response measured in mass of tomatoes produced

4 Statistical Analysis One-way ANOVA of total mean mass of tomatoes per plant for each treatment

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6 Shrimp Sludge Characteristics SampleTotal N % dry matter Total PO 4 -P % dry matter Total K % dry matter NO 3 -N  g/g Olsen P  g/g Soluble K  g/g EC dS/m 10.130.100.231497.422.6027.3 20.480.210.204.3673.5053.68.5 Total N, PO 4 -P and K show total plant macronutrients NO 3 -N, Olsen P and soluble K show plant available nutrients EC provides a measurement of soil salinity

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10 Results

11 Tomato Production TreatmentTomato Mass (g/plant) SEM 0% (Control)39.2 a 11.54 5% 402 g/plant 65.1 a 11.14 10% 805 g/plant 141.1 b 20.73 20% 1,620 g/plant 113.6 b 19.9 Different superscripts indicate a significant difference, p<0.05

12 Conclusions Applications of 10% and 20% increased plant production Suggests land application will benefit crop production while providing a disposal mechanism Large, field scale application experiment suggested to verify results Soil salinity must also be monitored, given high evaporation rates Sludge is highly variable, depending on pond management


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