Comparison of soil extraction procedures for estimating phosphorus release potential of agricultural soils
2001
Delgado, A. | Torrent, J.
Excessive phosphorus (P) discharge from agricultural soils to freshwater may contribute to eutrophication processes. The study of the release of P from soil, using laboratory simulations (long-term desorption experiments with different solution:soil ratios) can provide an idea of the amount of P that can be released from soil particles to water (potentially desorbable P). In the studied soils, the P release patterns are clearly related to the dominant P forms and soil properties. In this sense, the fraction of Total P (TP) that is released at 340 days (solution:soil ratio = 10,000) is positively correlated (P<0.001) with the Index of Surface Saturation by P (SI), defined as the ratio between the Isotopically Exchangeable P at 1 day (IEP1) and the maximum P sorption capacity calculated using the Langmuir equation (X(m)-). A figure of the amount of potentially desorbable P from an environmental point of view can be provided by extrapolation of the amount of released molybdate reactive P (MRP) to a reference concentration of MRP in the solution which can be assumed to be 0.01 mg L-1. The ratio between this predicted amount (Q0.01) and TP in soil is also closely related to SI, indicating that the amount of P that can be released from soil to water depends on soil properties and especially on the degree of surface saturation by P. Phosphorus extraction methods using chemical extractions and P sinks can provide a quantification of the potential for P to be released from soils to water. Goethite, that is a near-infinite P sink, and mixed resins [cation and anion exchange resins (CAER)] are effective in extracting soil P, and the extracted amounts using these methods are closely related to the estimated amounts of potentially desorbable P. The extraction using goethite at 2 days is also a useful method for estimating the Total P Available for Plants (TPAP). Thus, this extraction method constitutes an alternative method to traditional agronomic soil tests in order to assess agronomic P availability as well as the P content of soils with environmental significance.
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