Land use and landscape position influence soil organic phosphorus speciation in a mixed land use watershed
2021
Perillo, Vanesa L. | Cade‐Menun, Barbara J. | Ivancic, Monika | Ross, D. S. | Wemple, Beverley C.
Land use can significantly alter soil P forms, which will influence P loss in runoff. Organic P (Pₒ) compounds are an important component of soil P, but their forms and cycling in soils with different land uses are still poorly understood. In addition, streambanks are potential sources of P loss; P forms and concentrations in streambank soils may vary with land use, affecting potential P loss to water. This study used solution ³¹P nuclear magnetic resonance spectroscopy to characterize and quantify P in interior and streambank soils (0–10 cm) under duplicate sites from four different land uses along streams in the Missisquoi River basin (VT, USA): silage corn, hay meadow, emergent wetlands, and forest. Orthophosphate monoesters were the dominant P compound class regardless of land use or landscape position. Forest soils had the lowest Pₒ concentrations, less labile P forms than other soils, and significantly lower concentrations of total inositol hexakisphosphates and total orthophosphate monoesters compared with corn soils. Riparian buffer zones for agricultural soils lowered P concentrations in streambank soils for many soil P pools relative to interior soils. The wetland soils of this study had P concentrations and P forms that were similar to those for interior agricultural soils and generally showed no reduction in P concentrations in streambank soils relative to interior soils. This is consistent with the role of wetlands as P sinks in the landscape but also suggests these wetlands should be carefully monitored to minimize P accumulation, especially in streambank soils.
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