1 / 19

Introducing ……...

Introducing ……. Slate waste. EU Life -Environment funded project: Sustainable post-industrial land restoration and re-creation of high biodiversity natural habitats. Partners: University of Wales, Bangor; Alfred McAlpine Slate; Slate Ecology Co., Pizarras- Villar del Rey

bunny
Download Presentation

Introducing ……...

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Introducing ……... Slate waste

  2. EU Life-Environment funded project: Sustainable post-industrial land restoration and re-creation of high biodiversity natural habitats Partners: University of Wales, Bangor; Alfred McAlpine Slate; Slate Ecology Co., Pizarras- Villar del Rey Output: To produce a science-based guide to Best Practice for achieving the restoration of self-sustaining, semi-natural ecosystems of high conservation value

  3. Scope of the project • Nutrient and water delivery systems • Plant responses • Litter decomposition and soil formation • Invertebrate, detritivore and bird biodiversity • Socio-economic impacts • GIS overlays of environmental variables

  4. Soil functioning in natural and restored systems on slate waste Julie Williamson1, Davey Jones1, Richard Bardgett2, Phil Hobbs3, Ed Rowe1, Mark Nason1 & John Healey1. 1 University of Wales, Bangor, 2 University of Lancaster, 3 IGER.

  5. Rationale and Hypotheses • typically, quarry sites lack topsoil • H.1 theoretical C:N considerations can be used to design substrates from organic wastes for nutrient delivery • nutrient cycling needs a ‘kick start’ • H.2 organic matter increases nutrient cycling capacity • need to develop soil biochemical indices that predict longer-term above-ground success • H.3 organic amendments create a substrate biochemically comparable to that of naturally established vegetation

  6. Method used for tree planting 1-year old transplant Slates arranged to Free-draining collect rainfall coarse slate waste Soil amendments in 3 L pocket, depth 15 cm Roots moving towards fines 1m Water-holding fines

  7. Design of tree establishment trial 3 water-holding treatments None Boulder clay Polyacrylamide gel 3 nutrient supply treatments None *Sewage-paper NPK (15:10:10) mix slow release * mixed to a target C:N of 15-20 and to deliver mineral N at the same rate as NPK in Year 1

  8. Materials used for tree establishment Selected nutrient concentrations of the organic amendment. Target application rates to planting pocket kg.N ha-1 NPK 550 sewage-paper 4000

  9. Results: substrate Mineral-N content (mg N.kg-1) over 3 samplings (1, 7, 13 months)

  10. Results:soil microbial biomass (mg N.kg-1) and basal respiration (mg C.kg-1.h-1) at 13 months

  11. Results: summary of soil N pool sizes at 13 months *PMN is potentially mineralisable N

  12. Results: comparing soil quality indices of naturally established and planted birch.

  13. Results: comparing soil quality indices of naturally established and planted birch.

  14. Results: Soil microbial PLFA profiles of natural and planted vegetation. Proportion (% mol) of Gram+ve bacterial PLFA to total. S S S < Natural >< Planted >

  15. Results: Soil microbial PLFA profiles of natural and planted vegetation. Ratio of fungal-to-bacterial PLFA. Ratio of fungal to bacterial PLFA < Natural >< Planted >

  16. Results:Soil microbial PLFA variation in natural and planted vegetation. Plot of coordinates derived from detrended correspondence analysis (Canoco)

  17. Conclusions H.1 theoretical C:N considerations can be used to design substrates from organic wastes for nutrient delivery Yes; soil mineral N concentrations during the first 13 months in the NPK treatment were matched by the sewage-paper mix treatment H.2 organic matter increases nutrient cycling capacity Yes; as evidenced by increases in microbial biomass, respiration and potentially mineralisable N, relative to other treatments

  18. Conclusions cont’d • H.3 organic amendments create a substrate biochemically comparable to that of naturally established vegetation • Sewage-paper resulted in soil microbial biomass and respiration rate comparable to those in natural systems • But, microbial composition differed markedly, viz: • Planted systems had: • greater proportion of bacterial PLFA • lower microbial C:N ratio • higher respiratory quotient

More Related