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ABSTRACT
Soil receives a large amount of P annually through above and below ground plant materials and animal excretions. This P in these materials becomes available to the growing plants through microbial decomposition. Since P mineralization follows C mineralization (CO2 loss), both C loss and P mineralization (measured by the amount of P utilized by oats (Avena sativa L.) from the added roots and tops of 14C- and 82P-labelled white clover (Trifolium repens L.) were assessed for 10 weeks in the controlled environment chambers (26°C/16°C, 12-hour day/night temperature). By 10 weeks, 42 and 38% of applied P was utilized by oats from the roots and tops, respectively. During the same period, about 55 and 70% of the C was lost from the roots and tops, respectively, of the added plant material. The half-lives, t1/2, of 82P utilization from the roots and tops were 10.8 and 12.4 weeks, respectively. The corresponding t1/2 of 14C mineralization were 15.3 and 8.1 weeks in the presence of plants and 15.2 and 9.7 weeks in the absence of plants.
After the initial rapid loss of C, P mineralization followed C mineralization (or loss) of the added plant material closely. Since the decaying of roots and tops of crop plants and pastures in the field release P upon mineralization, this factor should be considered in soil P management practices.
1 Contribution from the University of New England, Armidale, N.S.W. Australia. Australian Meat Research Committee financed the project.
2 Department of Soil Science, Waite Agric. Res. Inst., Glen Osmond, S.A. 5064, Australia.
Received for publication January 4, 1979. Accepted for publication March 22, 1979.
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