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Unpublished Paper
Evaluation of tillage and crop rotation effects on groundwater quality—Nashua project
Leopold Center Completed Grant Reports
  • Rameshwar S. Kanwar, Iowa State University
  • Douglas Karlen, United States Department of Agriculture
  • Thomas S. Colvin, United States Department of Agriculture
  • William W. Simpkins, Iowa State University
  • Vince J. McFadden, Iowa State University
Project ID
1990-41
Abstract

Sampling shows that agricultural chemicals are occurring increasingly in ground- and surface water in Iowa. The same trend has been reported throughout the United States; one study reported finding 73 pesticides in the groundwater of 34 states. Even pesticides known to be adsorbed to soil particles (and thus relatively immobile) have been found in a few sampled wells in trace concentrations. Nitrate-nitrogen (NO3-N) is the most common agricultural chemical found in groundwater. Nitrogen fertilizers and pesticides applied to the soil surface prior to and immediately following crop planting are particularly susceptible to surface runoff or leaching to groundwater through the soil profile.

Principal Investigator(s)
Rameshwar S. Kanwar
Co-Investigator(s)
Douglas L. Karlen, Thomas S. Colvin, William W. Simpkins, Vince J. McFadden
Year of Grant Completion
1994
Citation Information
Rameshwar S. Kanwar, Douglas Karlen, Thomas S. Colvin, William W. Simpkins, et al.. "Evaluation of tillage and crop rotation effects on groundwater quality—Nashua project" (1994)
Available at: http://works.bepress.com/douglas_karlen/21/