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Vol. 26. Issue 3.
Pages 337-348 (July 2013)
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Vol. 26. Issue 3.
Pages 337-348 (July 2013)
Open Access
Sugar cane nutrient requirements and the role of atmospheric deposition supplying supplementary fertilization in a Venezuelan sugar cane plantation
Visits
2160
D. López-Hernández
Corresponding author
danilo.lopez@ciens.ucv.ve

Corresponding author.
, D. Sequera
Laboratorio de Estudios Ambientales, Instituto de Zoología y Ecología Tropical, Facultad de Ciencias, Universidad Central de Venezuela, Apartado 80249, Caracas, Venezuela
O. Vallejo
Universidad Nacional Experimental de los Llanos Occidentales, Decanato de Postgrado, Guanare, Estado Portuguesa, Venezuela
C. Infante
Laboratorio de Estudios Ambientales, Instituto de Zoología y Ecología Tropical, Facultad de Ciencias, Universidad Central de Venezuela, Apartado 80249, Caracas, Venezuela
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Tables (4)
Table I. Monthly average pH and sum of cation concentrations (µeq L−1) in bulk deposition and throughfall in a sugarcane agroecosystem located in central northern Venezuela. Bulk deposition included wet and dry deposition collected above the sugarcane canopy.
Table II. Annual fluxes (kg ha−1 yr−1) of nutrients in bulk deposition and throughfall, and net throughfall in a sugarcane agroecosystem located in central northern Venezuela. Significant differences (t-test, P < 0.05) between bulk deposition and throughfall are shown in bold in the column “net throughfall”.
Table III. Annual weighted average of macronutrients (mg L−1) and heavy metals (µg L−1) in bulk deposition and throughfall in a sugarcane agroecosystem located in central northern Venezuela.
Table IV. Nutrient inputs in bulk deposition and nutrient requirements in a sugarcane agroecosystem located in central northern Venezuela. The N and P requirements were taken from López-Hernández et al. (1993) and micronutrient requirements from Vallejo-Torres (1988).
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Resumen

La región centro norte de Venezuela está caracterizada por lluvias de naturaleza ácida, cargadas de contaminantes que incluyen nutrientes, debido a la intensa actividad industrial y agrícola de la zona. Esta región presenta a su vez grandes extensiones de plantaciones de caña de azúcar. Una vez que la lluvia pasa por el dosel de bosques o de ecosistemas agrícolas, su composición química cambia, ya sea por absorción, lixiviación o lavado de iones depositados en el dosel. Este documento describe los cambios en la química de las aguas de lluvias después de pasar por el dosel de una plantación de caña de azúcar. En cuatro parcelas de 300m2 ubicadas en un área experimental de 4.5 ha, plantadas con Saccharum officinarum, se instalaron colectores de agua de lluvia y de escurrimiento foliar. El estudio corresponde al análisis de crecimiento de la tercera soca del cultivo. El pH del agua de lluvia se incrementa cuando pasa por el dosel. La magnitud de los cambios fue importante y se relacionó parcialmente con las cantidades significativas de cationes que se lavan del dosel. Las entradas de N en el agroecosistema fueron altas (25.25kg ha1 a−1) como consecuencia de la fertilización y quema local de la caña antes de su cosecha y la actividad industrial (petroquímica y fertilizantes) desarrollada en la zona. Las precipitaciones (húmeda y seca) representan una importante fuente de entradas de nutrientes a la plantación. En el caso de los macronutrientes (N, P y K) las entradas fueron altas y suplen una significativa fracción de los requerimientos del cultivo, lo mismo ocurre en el caso del zinc y del cobre.

Abstract

As a consequence of high industrial and agricultural activities, acidic rains loaded with pollutants—including nutrients—are characteristic of northern central Venezuela, a region dominated by sugar cane plantations. Canopies of forest and agricultural crops can modify the chemistry of rainfall through uptake, leaching and outwash of deposited ions. This paper describes the change in the chemistry of acid rains after passing through a sugar cane canopy. Four plots of 300m2 within a 4.5 ha experimental area, planted with Saccharum officinarum had rain and throughfall collectors installed. The study corresponds to the analysis of the growing season of the third ratoon. The pH of the rain in the agroecosy stem increased after passing through the canopy. The magnitudes of the changes were important and partially related to the significant amount of cations leached from the leaves or washed out from dry deposition to the leaves. N inputs for wet and dry deposition in the agroecosystem were high (25.25kg ha−1 yr−1) as a consequence of the agricultural activity in the area, the local burning of sugar cane before cropping, and the location of the experimental area close to petrochemical and fertilizer industries. Rainfall constitutes an important source of nutrient inputs to the sugar cane system. In the case of macronutrients (N, P and K) the inputs were high and supply an important fraction of plant nutrient needs, as occurs for zinc and copper.

Keywords:
N-deposition
throughfall
foliar leaching
pollution
foliar fertilization
Full Text
1Introduction

Acidic rains enriched with ammonium (NH4), phosphorus (P) and sulphur (S) are characteristic of northern Venezuela (Morales et al., 1998), a region currently supporting sugar cane plantations where significant agricultural and industrial activities take place generating significant revenue annually.

Nitrogen (N) inputs (NH4+ and nitrate NO3) in precipitation are considered of great importance in the N economy of natural ecosystems (López-Hernández et al., 2012), but in agroecosystems, those inputs are of lesser importance when compared with the N requirements for crop production (Stevenson, 1982; Thorburn et al., 2005). N and other nutrients present in precipitation and dry deposition can originate from a variety of natural and anthropogenic sources, including air pollution (Rodrigo et al., 2003). Emissions from anthropogenic pollution are beneficial, as some deposited elements are nutrients for forests and crops (López-Hernández et al., 2012), but harmful as well under certain polluted environments, e.g. where trace metal deposition is important (Pritsch et al., 2006).

Tree and agricultural crops canopies modify raindrop trajectories by partitioning the incident rainfall into throughfall and stemflow (Park and Cameron, 2008). Aproportion of the incident rainfall is intercepted (I) by, and retained temporarily on leaf surface, branches and stems. Throughfall (TF) is the portion of rainfall (P) that reaches the soil by passing directly or by dripping from the canopies (forest or crop plantations). These components may be linked by the relationship:

Concerning precipitation chemistry, canopies of forests and agricultural crops can modify the chemistry of rainfall in different ways: (1) uptake and retention by the canopy, (2) removal and leaching of ions from leaves, or (3) changes in the rain waters when passing through the canopy (throughfall) by the wash out of dry deposition (Tukey, 1970; Rodrigo et al., 2003; Perez-Marin and Menezes, 2008). The magnitude of the foliar leaching depends on a variety of factors: plant age, physiological state, plant composition and canopy morphology (Malek and Astel, 2007), but also on frequency, duration, intensity and chemical composition of the rainwater; moreover, in polluted areas the actual composition of the throughfall depends on the pollution source (Rodrigo et al., 2003).

The high primary production (ca. 60-100 ton ha−1 yr−1), and the particular plant architecture of the canopy of the sugar cane allow an important leaf interception of the income precipitation. Rainfall arriving sugar cane systems, in turn, might have a change in its chemical composition mainly due to throughfall processes, before it reaches the soil. However, few studies have tried to understand the changes in the chemistry of the atmospheric deposition through canopy interactions in a sugar cane agroecosystem during its development.

This paper describes the changes in the chemistry of acid tropical rainwater after passing through a sugar cane canopy along the development of their third ratoon. Particular emphasis is given to the quantification of the inputs of macronutrients (N, K, P) and micronutrients (Fe, Mn, Zn, and Cu) in the agroecosystem. Therefore, we studied whether the element deposition (particularly for the macronutrients N, P, K) constituted a relevant proportion of the nutrients retained in the sugar cane canopy.

2Material and methods2.1Study site

The study was located in a sugar cane farm near San Felipe, Yaracuy state, central Venezuela (10° 29’44”N and 68° 31’ 44” W). The experimental site corresponds to a tropical humid climate region (1400-1700mm of precipitation) affected by marine aerosols.

Four plots of 300 m2 within an experimental area of 4.5 ha planted with Saccharum officinarum were selected for the installation of rain and throughfall collectors. Study corresponds to the analysis of the growing period of two sugar cane varieties (Puerto Rico 1028 [PR] and Venezuela 58-4 [V]). The soil is a Mollisols, Haplaquoll (fine loam, isohiperthermic, muscovite, montmorillonitic, kaolinitic) with a pH of 7.4, moderate to high effective cation exchange capacity (ECEC), moderate to high available and total P contents, and moderate N content.

2.2Collection of rain and through/all waters and analysis

Collection of rain and throughfall waters was weekly conducted during three consecutive years; however information here presented corresponds to the year of the third ratoon.

Bulk depositions (i.e., wet plus dry) were collected with plastic funnels of 18.5 cm internal diameter (PVC polyvinyl chloride) attached 4.5 m above soil surface and above the sugar cane canopies. The funnels were permanently open to the atmosphere; therefore, precipitation thus collected corresponds to bulk deposition as named by Eriksson (1953) and comprises the wet deposition flux and the dry deposition flux of gravitory sedimentation (Rodrigo et al., 2003). The funnels were connected to 2 L polyethylene terephtalate (PET) bottles, which were first acid-washed (HC150%) and then rinsed with demineralized water. Bulk deposition (BD) for chemical analysis was sampled during one year from five gauges located in the plots.

Throughfall waters were collected in PVC funnels attached 0.30 m above soil surface within the canopies connected to PET bottle collectors. In this study, due to the usual high variability of the throughfall measures, a total of twenty collectors were installed for regular sampling instead of the five installed for bulk collection. Nylon meshes were placed in the funnel necks, and at the end of tube and bottle connections to prevent insects or vegetal debris from falling inside the sampling collectors.

Net throughfall for a particular element (NTFe) corresponds to the modification of precipitation chemistry as water enters the system and is defined as NTFe = TFe − BDe, where TFe and BDe correspond to the amount of the element in throughfall and bulk deposition, respectively. More details of the methodology are presented in Infante et al. (1993) and López-Hernández et al. (2005).

2.3Chemical analysis

After one day of collection, the samples were taken to the laboratory where pH was measured with a glass electrode. Water samples were then filtered through 0.45µm pore size Millipore filters, and phenyl mercury acetate (1ml L−1) was added as preservative. Samples were rejected when contaminated by debris. Two aliquots of each sample (one acidified with 1ml L−1 pure HNO3 bidistilled with a quartz distiller) were kept for further analysis.

In the non-acidified samples, NO3 and NH4 in the waters were analyzed in a Technicon Auto Analyzer II (Technicon Industrial Systems, 1974) whereas P (PO4−3) was determined with the colorimetric method of Murphy and Riley (1962). Cations (Na, K, Ca and Mg) were analyzed by atomic absorption in a Varian Techtron AA6.

Aliquot samples acidified with HNO3 (in order to avoid adsorption of micronutrients in the recipient walls) were kept at 4 °C until the micronutrient analysis was performed. Micronutrients (Fe, Mn, Zn and Cu) in precipitation and throughfall waters were analyzed by flameless absorption spectroscopy, but without preconcentration; an HGA 2100 heated graphite atomizer (Perkin-Elmer) was employed.

Bulk deposition and throughfall waters were analyzed individually from several samples collected during a given month and averaged for monthly inputs as the product of bulk deposition and throughfall volumes, and monthly weighted average concentration of the element. The annual inputs of elements in incident rainfall (BDe) and throughfall (TFe) to the sugar cane plantation were expressed per unit area (ha).

2.4Statistical analyses

Analyses were carried out with t-tests (Student t-test, p < 0.05) for paired samples on the difference between monthly concentration of elements in precipitation and throughfall waters.

3Results3.1Developing of the sugar cane canopy and rain interception

The monthly percentage of canopy interception increased sharply with the age of the plantation during the first five months (third ratoon, Fig. 1) until a maximum of 60.3%, and then it fluctuated around that maximum (38.3-59.9%). During the study period, the total precipitation measured was 1752mm, whereas the water volume estimated from the throughfall was 1124mm, which corresponds to 64% of the total precipitation.

Fig. 1.

Percentage of rainwater intercepted by the canopy in a sugarcane agroecosystem.

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3.2The pH and base cation concentrations in rainwater

The pH of bulk deposition in the sugar cane agro-ecosystem increased by 0.93 to 1.64 pH units as it passed through the canopy (Table I). Those results may reflect the significant amount of cations leached from the leaves or washed out from materials deposited on the leaves and cane stems (Table I). Thus, throughfall waters were enriched in bases compared with bulk deposition, particularly after June (peak of the rainy season) when the sum of bases in the throughfall waters surpassed the values of the bulk deposition (Table I, Fig. 2).

Table I.

Monthly average pH and sum of cation concentrations (µeq L−1) in bulk deposition and throughfall in a sugarcane agroecosystem located in central northern Venezuela. Bulk deposition included wet and dry deposition collected above the sugarcane canopy.

Month  BD pH  TFpH  Sum of BD cations  Sum of TF cations  Sum of TF/BD cations 
April  4.52  5.50  227  138  0.61 
May  3.70  5.26  177  105  0.60 
June  3.97  4.99  209  271  1.30 
July  3.97  4.90  156  145  0.93 
August  4.22  5.45  83  134  1.61 
September  3.67  5.20  113  225  1.99 
October  3.54  4.50  66  198  3.00 
November  4.12  5.76  126  210  1.67 
December  4.20  5.29  103  251  2.44 

BD: bulk deposition; TF: throughfall.

Fig. 2.

Monthly weighted average concentrations of cations (mg L−1) in rain and throughfall waters.

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The average monthly values for cations (Fig. 2) followed the order Na > K > Mg > Ca. The dominance of Na in precipitation reflects the deposition of marine aerosols in the studied area. Na and K in the precipitation water at the sugar cane agroecosystem (Fig. 2) showed an annual mean concentration of 1.87 and 1.41mg L−1 respectively. Mg presented an intermediate concentration (0.24mg L−1) whereas the Ca average concentration was the lowest (0.12mg L−1).

3.3Net throughfall of cations

There was a net positive throughfall of Mg from the canopy (more than twice the bulk deposition) and to a lesser extent for Ca. In contrast, the Na concentration showed a net negative throughfall that was significantly different (t-test, p < 0.05) between deposition and throughfall from April to October (Fig. 2, Table II), whereas for K there was a small net negative through-fall (Table II); however, the canopy losses were high in the months of August to October (Fig. 2).

Table II.

Annual fluxes (kg ha−1 yr−1) of nutrients in bulk deposition and throughfall, and net throughfall in a sugarcane agroecosystem located in central northern Venezuela. Significant differences (t-test, P < 0.05) between bulk deposition and throughfall are shown in bold in the column “net throughfall”.

Element  Bulk deposition  Throughfall  Net throughfall 
Na  24.92  14.34  -10.58 
22.54  21.54  -1.00 
Mg  3.34  7.89  4.55 
Ca  1.93  2.45  0.52 
N-NO3  0.06  4.14  4.08 
N-NH4  25.19  9.30  -15.89 
P-(H2PO4−314.71  4.84  -9.87 
Zn  0.633  0.269  -0.364 
Cu  0.104  0.098  -0.006 
Mn  0.131  0.062  -0.069 
Fe  0.263  0.201  -0.062 
3.4Nitrogen and phosphorus concentrations in rain waters

NH4 was the predominant N form in the precipitation water with a mean value of 1.29mg L−1 (Fig. 3), but nitrate-N was not detectable in the majority of months (Fig. 3). P (PO4−3) concentrations in rainwater ranged from 0.10 to 1.64mg L−1 (Fig. 3). After passing through the sugar cane canopy there was a strong enrichment in nitrates in the throughfall compared with the bulk deposition (28.67), whereas in the case of NH4and orthophosphate the annual concentrations of the bulk deposition decreased in a significant form due to canopy absorption (Table III).

Fig. 3.

Monthly weighted average concentrations of N (N-ammonium and N-nitrate) and P (P-H2PO4) in bulk deposition and throughfall in a sugar cane agrosystem.

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Table III.

Annual weighted average of macronutrients (mg L−1) and heavy metals (µg L−1) in bulk deposition and throughfall in a sugarcane agroecosystem located in central northern Venezuela.

Element  BD  TF  TF/BD 
N-NO3  0.015  0.43  28.67 
N-NH4  1.88  1.00  0.53 
P-(H2PO4−30.76  0.43  0.57 
Zn  40.1  25.3  0.63 
Cu  6.2  8.9  1.43 
Mn  8.9  6.0  0.67 
Fe  15.6  19.5  1.25 

BD: bulk deposition; TF: throughfall.

3.5Net throughfall of nitrogen and phosphorus

There was an important N fertilization (net negative throughfall) of the canopy through NH4 absorption. In contrast, the net positive throughfall of NO3 indicates that NO3 was leached from the canopy (leaves and stem) in throughfall waters (Table II, Fig. 3), particularly in the months when NO3 was not detectable in bulk deposition. The important amounts of P (PO4−3) entering the sugar cane system in the incident precipitation were retained in the canopy of the agroecosystem; therefore a negative annual throughfall of 9.87kg P ha−1 yr−1 was found (Table II).

3.6Trace metals concentrations in rainwater

Figure 4 presents the weighted average concentrations of the trace metals analyzed (Fe, Mn, Zn and Cu) in the precipitation waters. Zn had the highest concentration followed by Fe, while Cu and Mn presented similar values (Fig. 4). Throughfall waters were enriched in Cu and Fe compared with bulk deposition (Table III); on the contrary, the annual concentrations of bulk deposition decreased significantly in the case of Zn and Mn due to active canopy absorption (Table III).

Fig. 4.

Monthly weighted average concentrations of heavy metals in bulk deposition and throughfall in a sugar cane agroecosystem.

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3.7Net throughfall of trace metals

Net throughfall deposition was negative for Zn, Mn and Fe (Fig. 4, Table II), whereas in the case of Cu, rain and throughfall depositions were almost similar. Net throughfall of Mn and Fe were moderately negative (62-69g ha−1 yr−1), whereas for Zn it was strongly negative accounting for a significant foliar absorption (364g ha−1 yr−1).

4Discussion4.1Development of the sugar cane canopy and rain interception

Information corroborates the effect of crop development in rainwater interception. There is an initial increase of interception as the canopy develops, and then it stabilizes around 40% of interception when the canopy is fully developed (Fig. 1). After the fifth month of crop development, when the maximum interception is achieved, a high variability in interception measures is found (38.3-59.9%) that is related to plant senescence. Thus, the incremental accumulation of dead materials (leaves and stems) relative to the living parts strongly affected rainwater interception (Dunne and Leopold, 1978). Rutter (1963) and Grimm and Fassbender (1981) have pointed out that successive and copious rain events contribute to saturation or overflooding of the canopy surface, consequently decreasing its interception capacity.

Although the information for canopy interception is copious in temperate and tropical forests, fewer studies of rainfall interception in grasslands have been done (Friesen et al., 2012). Leopoldo et al. (1981) reported 57% of precipitation interception in domestic sugar cane, a similar value to the one presented here, whereas in a recent publication Friesen et al. (2012), comparing rainfall interception in tropical hardwood trees and wild sugar cane Saccharum venosum, found interception values of 56.1% for the wild grass.

The interception value at maximum crop development reported here is lower than the values presented by Dezzeo and Chacón (2006) for tropical forests (77-80%) and Rodrigo et al., (2003) in holm oak (Quercus ilex L.) Mediterranean forests (72-85%); however, our value corresponds to the lower limit (62.1-94.5%) of the range presented by Galoux et al., (1981) for different tropical forests and was higher compared with other gramineous plants (Ward, 1967). The interception values of the sugar cane agroecosystem are related with the architecture of the sugar cane canopy at the end of the growing season, which is characterized by abundant foliage with a receptacle formed between the stem and the basis of the foliage that helps to hold and therefore intercept rainwater within the canopy.

4.2The pH and base cation concentrations of rainwater

Precipitation pHs in the studied plantation ranged from 3.54 to 4.52 (Table I), a common situation in northern central Venezuela as a consequence of high industrial (petrochemical and fertilizer production plants) and agricultural (crop fertilization and cattle raising) activities (Lewis and Weibezahn; 1981, Sequera et al., 1991; López-Hernández et al., 2012). In the rest of Venezuela, even in the absence of anthropogenic influence, precipitation is fairly acid (5.1-5.8) (Montes et al., 1987, López-Hernández 2008).

Concentrations of Na and K were higher than the values presented by Steinhardt and Fassbender (1979) in a cloud forest located in San Eusebio, Venezuela, and by López-Hernández et al. (1994) in a flooded savanna ecosystem in Mantecal, Venezuela located far from the ocean and in a more pristine environment. On the contrary, Steinhardt and Fassbender (1979) in a forest site at San Eusebio, Venezuela and López-Hernández et al. (1994) at Mantecal, Venezuela reported higher annual averages for Ca and Mg. In a pristine forest ecosystem at the Canaima National Park, located in Gran Sabana, southeastern Venezuela, Dezzeo and Chacón (2006) reported very low mean concentration of cations (0.04 and 0.11mg L−1 for Ca and K, respectively) in incident waters.

4.3Changes in pH and bases in the throughfall waters

The pH of bulk deposition in the sugar cane agro-ecosystem increased as it passed through the canopy (Table I). These results may reflect the significant amount of cations leached from the leaves or washed out from materials deposited on the leaves and cane stems from terrestrial dust (Table I), though we cannot separate both effects based on the information obtained. Throughfall waters were enriched in bases compared with bulk deposition, particularly after June (peak of the rainy season) when the sum of bases in the throughfall waters surpassed the values of the bulk deposition (Table I, Fig. 2). Similar information is presented by Rodrigo et al. (2003) for Mediterranean forests that receive African red rains, which were responsible for most of the inputs of alkalinity and base cations inputs from bulk deposition. However, the precipitations in the Mediterranean environment were more enriched in Ca and Mg compared with this tropical site.

4.4Net throughfall of cations

Net throughfall differs among cations, thus there was a net positive throughfall of Mg from the canopy and to a lesser extent for Ca. In contrast, Na concentration showed a net negative throughfall that was significantly different (t-test, p < 0.05) between deposition and throughfall from April to October (Fig. 2, Table II), whereas for K there was a small net negative throughfall (Table II). However, canopy losses were high in the months of August to October (Fig. 2).

In two polluted forest sites in the México City air basin, Pérez-Suárez et al. (2008) reported a net positive throughfall deposition of Ca, Mg and K. Pérez-Marín and Menezes (2008) reported important K inputs to the soil from the throughfall waters in an agroforestry system with Gliricidia sepium in the semi-arid northeastern Brazil. Moreover, Dezzeo and Chacón (2006) reported that the low mean concentration of cations in precipitation waters was significantly higher (positive throughfall) after the passage through the forest canopy in a pristine forest ecosystem in the Canaima National Park, Gran Sabana, southeastern Venezuela.

4.5Nitrogen and phosphorus in rainwaters

NH4 was the predominant N form (mean value 1.29mg L−1) in the precipitation water, but nitrate-N was not detectable in the majority of months (Fig. 3). Steinhardt and Fassbender (1979) in the cloud forest of San Eusebio, Venezuela, located about 300km from the experimental site, and also affected by petrochemical activity, reported a lower N concentration (0.64mg L−1, mostly NH4). In Venezuelan more pristine environments at Gran Sabana, very much lower N concentration in incident waters (0.04mg L−1) has been reported (Dezzeo and Chacón, 2006).

The P (PO4−3) concentrations in rainwater ranged from 0.10 to 1.64mg L−1 (Fig. 3). The values exceeded the information generally presented in the literature, which are about 0.05mg L−1. Concentrations of P (PO4−3) in rainfall are much affected by ash deposition, since the higher concentrations correspond to the period from November to March (Fig. 3), when the sugar cane plantations are burned in the areas located in the neighborhood of the experimental plot (Sequera et al., 1991).

4.6Changes in nitrogen and phosphorus contents in the throughfall waters

There was an important N fertilization (net negative throughfall) of the canopy through NH4 absorption. In contrast, the net positive throughfall of NO3 indicates that NO3 was leached from the canopy (leaves and stem) in throughfall waters (Table II, Fig. 3), particularly in the months when NO3 was no detectable in bulk deposition. In two polluted forest sites in the México city air basin, Pérez-Suárez et al. (2008) reported also a negative throughfall deposition of NH4 under fir and pine canopies, whereas Rodrigo et al. (2003) reported a relative low negative annual throughfall of 1.64 and 1.61kg ha−1 yr−1 of NO3 and NH4, respectively, for Mediterranean forests. The important amounts of P entering the sugar cane system in the incident precipitation were retained in the canopy of the sugar cane agroecosystem; therefore a negative annual throughfall of 9.87kg P ha−1 yr−1 was found (Table II).

4.7Trace metals in rainwaters

The weighted average Zn concentration in precipitation (40.1µg L−1) was higher in the sugar cane agroecosystem than the values presented in tropical environments by Steinhardt and Fassbender (1979) in a cloud forest (2.4µg L−1), López-Hernández (2008) in a seasonally flooded Venezuelan savanna (28.6µg L−1), and McColl (1981) in a temperate eucalypt forest (16.1µg L−1), but lower than Zn concentration reported by Golley et al. (1975) in a Panamanian rain tropical forest (44µg L−1), and byLiu et al. (2005) in the southern Yellow sea, China (60-150µg L−1). In pristine environments, the weighted average Zn concentration in precipitation greatly surpasses the Cu concentrations (Driscoll et al., 1994; Liu et al., 2005; Muezzinoglu and Cukurluoglu, 2006).

The weighted average Cu concentration in rainwater (about 8.3µg L−1) is higher than the values presented by Steinhardt and Fassbender (1979) in San Eusebio, Venezuela (2.79µg L−1) and lowerthan the information given by Golley et al. (1975) for the Panamaniam forest ecosystem (24.0µg L−1) and by Muezzinoglu and Cukurluoglu (2006) in Izmir, Turkey (19.7µgL−1). Cu mean concentration is however about the values presented by López-Hernández (2008) in a flooded savanna (12.1µg L−1) and Liu et al. (2005) in a coastal region in the southern Yellow sea, China (3-15µg L−1). Fe and Mn concentrations were much lowerthan values reported by Steinhardt and Fassbender (1979) in San Eusebio, Venezuela.

4.8Element inputs at the sugar cane agroecosystem

The study site is near the sea; therefore, the cation concentrations in rainwater are affected by marine aerosols, although terrestrial dusts can also affect rainwater composition. Na and K inputs were high (24.92 and 22.54kg ha−1 yr−1, respectively, Table II) when compared with other Venezuelan ecosystems, whereas in the cases of Mg and Ca the rain inputs (3.34 and 1.93kg ha−1 yr−1, respectively) were lower and not much different than other Venezuelan sites.

Although nitrates were leached in throughfall waters (Fig. 3, Table II), N balance revealed significant N fertilization of the leave canopy (leaves and stem) through NH4+ absorption (Table II). Nitrogen inputs (25.25kg ha−1 yr−1) for wet and dry deposition, mostly in the NH4+form (25.19kg NH4+ ha−1 yr−1, Table II), were high compared with other ecosystems. This is, no doubt, due to the high agricultural (fertilization, cattle raising and burning before cropping of the plantation) and industrial (petrochemical and fertilizer production plants) activities near the experimental area. In Venezuelan savannas distant from urban activities, mineral nitrogen inputs by precipitation, on the contrary, ranged from 2.2 to 6.2kg N ha−1 yr−1 (López-Hernández et al., 2012).

The high amounts of P entering the sugar cane system as bulk deposition (Table II) account for a high P input (14.71kg ha−1 yr−1), most of it (11.01kg ha−1 yr−1) in months when active burning of sugar cane plantations is taking place (November to April, Fig. 3); therefore, dry deposition of phosphate salts might be occurring in the area.

Zn input at sugar cane agroecosystem (633g ha−1 yr−1) was similar to the value presented for Mante-cal’s savannas (595g ha−1 yr−1) by López-Hernández (2008), much higher than the value (30g ha−1 yr−1) reported by Steinhardt and Fassbender (1979) for a cloud forest located at San Eusebio, Venezuela, and similar to the value presented by Liu et al. (2005) in a coastal region of the southern Yellow sea (428g ha−1 yr−1). However, Zn input at the agroecosystem was very much lower than the value presented by Heinrichs and Mayer (1977) in an industrialized Central European forest ecosystem (3900g ha−1 yr−1). Copper input in the sugar cane plantation (97.8g ha−1 yr−1) also exceeded the 45g ha−1 yr−1 presented for San Eusebio, Venezuela (Steinhardt and Fassbender 1979) and was under the values presented by Heinrich and Mayer (1977) in a heavy industrialized European forest ecosystem (224g ha−1 yr−1) and by López-Hernández (2008) in the savannas of Mante-cal, Venezuela (227g ha−1 yr−1). Annual deposition of iron (263g ha−1 yr−1) is much lower than the reported Steinhardt and Fassbender (1979) at San Eusebio, Venezuela. Manganese (Mn) input in precipitation water (131g ha−1 yr −1) was lower than values reported in other tropical areas (Steinhardt and Fassbender, 1979).

4.9Nutrient inputs in relation to sugar cane nutrient requirements

Bulk deposition of polluted areas might be an important source of nutrient inputs to plants, which helps to cope with their nutrient needs. By using information already published concerning the macro- and micro-nutrient requirements (e.g., amount of the element contained in stems, green leaves and roots at the peak of maximum development) of the sugar cane varieties examined in this study (López-Hernández et al., 1993; Vallejo-Torres, 1988) we have found that in the case of the micronutrients, all the Zn absorbed from bulk precipitation would be in excess (217%) of sugar cane requirements (Table IV). Cu demand by the crop is also well covered (48.7%) by this mechanism; however, much less of the Mn, K and Fe (9.9, 5.0 and 1.7%, respectively) required by the sugar cane can be obtained by bulk precipitation. The N input of rain water (25.25kg ha−1 yr−1) represents around 11% of the N requirements (228kg ha−1 yr−1) for biomass production of the sugar cane plantation while in the case of P the input as bulk deposition (15kg ha−1 yr−1) represents 24% of the P requirements (62kg ha−1 yr−1) of the varieties studied.

Table IV.

Nutrient inputs in bulk deposition and nutrient requirements in a sugarcane agroecosystem located in central northern Venezuela. The N and P requirements were taken from López-Hernández et al. (1993) and micronutrient requirements from Vallejo-Torres (1988).

Element  Precipitation input (kg ha−1Requirement (kg ha−1Percent of requirement from bulk deposition 
Zn  0.666  0.306  217 
Cu  0.098  0.201  48.7 
Mn  0.178  1.791  9.9 
Fe  0.440  25.637  1.7 
25.3  228.0  11.1 
P-(H2PO4−315.0  62.0  24.2 
22.5  453.0  5.0 
5Conclusions

Incident rainfall constitutes an important source of nutrient inputs to the sugar cane system studied. In the case of macronutrients (N and P) the inputs were considerable when compared with other tropical regions and supply an important fraction of plant nutrient requirements; a similar situation was recorded in the case of the micronutrients analyzed particularly for zinc and copper. Although the input of K was important, the high demand of the sugar cane for this element makes the contribution marginal. We did not register Na uptake, however a significant proportion of the Na coming with the bulk deposition was retained in the canopy (Table II). About 10% of the Mn needs can be covered by rainfall input, whereas in the case of iron, the precipitation supply is negligible compared with the plant’s needs. In the agroecosystem, Mg and K concentrations increased considerably during the passage of rainwater through the canopy, suggesting that these elements tend to be leached from plant tissues and were mobile, particularly at the end of the growing season.

Acknowledgements

The technical assistance of Lic. M. Niño and Mr. F. Tovar are acknowledged. The research received financial support from CENAZUCA, Consejo de Desarrollo Científico y Humanístico (CDCH) and Consejo Nacional de Ciencia y Tecnología (Conicit). Thanks to Dr. Lucy Sheppard (CEH Edinburgh Bush Estate Penicuik) for the revision of a previous version of this manuscript. One anonymous reviewer provided useful comments on an earlier draft that allowed us to improve the quality of the final manuscript.

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