The effect of soil type on phosphorus sorption capacity and desorption dynamics in Irish grassland soils

2006 ◽  
Vol 17 (1) ◽  
pp. 12-20 ◽  
Author(s):  
K. Daly ◽  
D. Jeffrey ◽  
H. Tunney
2003 ◽  
Vol 32 (1) ◽  
pp. 335-343 ◽  
Author(s):  
M. I. Litaor ◽  
O. Reichmann ◽  
M. Belzer ◽  
K. Auerswald ◽  
A. Nishri ◽  
...  

2020 ◽  
Author(s):  
Anders Bjørn Møller ◽  
Goswin Johann Hechrath ◽  
Cecilie Hermansen ◽  
Trine Nørgaard ◽  
Maria Knadel ◽  
...  

<p>Phosphorus (P) is one of the most important plant nutrients, and farmers regularly apply P as mineral fertilizer and with animal manures. Typically, reactions with amorphous aluminum and iron oxides or carbonates retain P in the soil. However, if P additions exceed the soil’s ability to bind them, P may leach from soil to surface waters, where it causes eutrophication. The phosphorus sorption capacity (PSC) is thus an inherent soil property that, when related to bound P, can describe the P saturation of the soil. Detailed knowledge of the spatial distribution of the PSC is therefore important information for assessing the risk of P leaching from agricultural land.</p><p>In weakly acidic soils predominant in Denmark, the PSC depends mainly on the oxalate-extractable contents of aluminum and iron. In this study, we aimed to map PSC in four depth intervals (0 – 25; 25 – 50; 50 – 75; 75 – 100 cm) for Denmark using measurements of oxalate-extractable aluminum and iron from 1,623 locations.</p><p>We mapped both elements using quantile regression forests. Predictions of oxalate-extractable aluminum had a weighted RMSE of 13.9 mmol kg<sup>-1</sup>. For oxalate-extractable iron, weighted RMSE was 33.5 mmol kg<sup>-1</sup>.</p><p>We included depth as a covariate and therefore trained one model for each element. For each element in each depth interval, we predicted the mean prediction value as well as 100 quantiles ranging from 0.5% to 99.5% in 1% intervals. The maps had a 30.4 m resolution. We then calculated PSC by convoluting the prediction quantiles of the two elements, using every combination of quantiles, in order to obtain the prediction uncertainty for PSC.</p><p>Oxalate-extractable aluminum was roughly normal distributed, while oxalate-extractable iron had a large positive skew. The age and origin of the parent material had a large effect on oxalate-extractable aluminum, and soil-forming processes such as weathering and podzolization had clear effects on the distribution in depth. Meanwhile, organic matter, texture and wetland processes were the main factors affecting oxalate-extractable iron, so much so that they obscured any trends with depth.</p><p>The weighted RMSE of the predicted PSC was 19.1 mmol kg<sup>-1</sup>. PSC was highest in wetland areas and lowest in young upland deposits, such as aeolian deposits and the loamy Weichselian moraines of eastern Denmark. The sandy glaciofluvial plains and Saalian moraines of western Denmark had intermediate PSC. In most cases, PSC was highest in the top soil, but in the sandy soils of western Denmark, PSC was highest in the depth interval 25 – 50 cm due to podzolization.</p>


2004 ◽  
Vol 16 (2) ◽  
pp. 98-105
Author(s):  
HUANG Qinghui ◽  
◽  
WANG Zijian ◽  
WANG Donghong ◽  
WANG Chunxia ◽  
...  

1974 ◽  
Vol 14 (66) ◽  
pp. 85 ◽  
Author(s):  
K Spencer ◽  
AG Govaars

Likely nutrient disorders were identified in an omission-type pot trial with white clover. The soils, taken from four virgin sites, were developed on the four main parent materials in the area, viz., tuff, basalt, shale, and granite. All were deficient in phosphorus and sulphur; three were deficient in molybdenum (the exception was the granitic soil), but only the granitic soil was deficient in copper. No other nutrients were deficient or in toxic amounts for clover growth, but oats responded to nitrogen on all four soils. The variability between soils sharing similar parent materials was studied in four easily defined suites by interpreting the analysis of 12 samples from each suite. Soils derived from acid volcanic rocks were consistently moderately acid, deficient in P, S, and Mo but variable in K and Cu status. Soils derived from basalt were typically less acid than those of the previous suite, had a wide range in P, K and Mo status, contained adequate Cu, but were consistently deficient in S. Soils derived from sedimentary rocks were typically moderately acid, consrstently deficient in P, S and Mo, but were variable in K and Cu status. The granitic soils ranged from moderately acid to neutral in reaction, had a wide range in P status and K status, were consistently deficient in S and often in Mo or Cu. The phosphorus sorption capacity was consistently low in the granitic soils but very variable in the other suites. Estimates of the amount of phosphorus required as a corrective dressing in the field suggest consistently low requirements by the granitic soils (10-30 kg P ha-1) whereas requirements ranged up to 120 kg P ha-1 in the other suites.


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