This post was contributed by a community member. The views expressed here are the author's own.

Health & Fitness

Your Lawn and The New Phosphorus Law

discharges, and many are working with homeowners that reside near water bodies to rectify problems with septic systems. The Connecticut legislature decided that the decline in water quality was significant enough to merit restrictions of phosphorus-containing fertilizers on established lawn areas. Golf courses and agricultural land are exempt from this regulation.What will this law mean for those responsible for maintaining a lawn area? If seeding or sodding a new lawn area or overseeding an existing lawn, no changes to your fertilizer regimen is needed. Typically new plantings of any crop benefit from the addition of some phosphorus to aid in root growth establishment so turfgrass starter fertilizers or complete garden fertilizers can be used at rates recommended on the package or by a soil test report.Established lawns do not have high phosphorus requirements and once optimum amounts are established in the soil you will supply sufficient phosphorus for good growth simply by leaving grass clippings on the lawn. The new legislation prohibits the application of lawn fertilizers containing phosphorus on established lawns unless a soil test, done within the past two years, shows that phosphorus is deficient and phosphorus needs to be applied. A quick glance at some name brand fertilizer websites shows that many of the larger companies have no-phosphorus synthetic fertilizers available, most likely in response to the growing number of states that are passing laws restricting phosphorus fertilizer use.Last May the Connecticut legislature passed a bill regulating the use of phosphorus on established lawns. The bill went into effect on January 1, 2013. This legislation was enacted because of a little known fact about phosphorus: it is the number one cause of declining water quality in fresh water lakes and ponds in Connecticut.Anyone who has purchased fertilizer knows that each package comes with a guaranteed analysis or grade consisting of three numbers such as 5-10-5. These numbers stand for the percent, on a dry weight basis, of nitrogen, phosphorus as phosphate and potassium as potash contained in that particular fertilizer. Fertilizers contain these three nutrients because they are often needed by cultivated plants in larger quantities than most native soils can supply for optimal plant growth. Plants need a number of other elements too, but they are usually supplied either by the soil itself or by additions of limestone and organic matter.Typically nitrogen is associated with green leafy growth and that is why many lawn fertilizers have an analysis like 24-2-8, where the nitrogen content is proportionately high relative to the phosphorus and potassium. Phosphorus is essential for root growth and Your Lawn and The New Phosphorus Law.  flowering, and potassium helps regulate water movement as well as increasing the plant’s ability to withstand stresses like disease and winter injury.When fertilizers, either organic or synthetic, are applied in the correct amounts and at the appropriate times during the growing season, plants will do well and the risk of nutrients entering water bodies will be minimized. Both nitrogen and phosphorus will cause problems when they enter lakes, streams, ponds and other water sources. Because phosphorus especially is low in concentration in native water sources, even the addition of small amounts will stimulate the growth of algae and other water plants and the water body will become eutrophic. As the lush aquatic plant growth dies and decomposes, oxygen levels in the water body become reduced often resulting in fish kills. The bottom line is that phosphorus contamination results in lakes that are undesirable for swimming, fishing and other recreational activities.The phosphorus that enters water bodies primarily comes from wastewater treatment plants, failing septic systems and fertilizers.  





We’ve removed the ability to reply as we work to make improvements. Learn more here

The views expressed in this post are the author's own. Want to post on Patch?