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Published in Soil Sci Soc Am J 51:963-969 (1987)
© 1987 Soil Science Society of America
677 S. Segoe Rd., Madison, WI 53711 USA
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Solubility Characteristics of Residual Phosphate in a Fertilized and Limed Ultisol1

Robert B. Harrison and Fred Adams2

ABSTRACT

Except at very low P rates, residual soil P (i.e., that measured by most extraction methods) continues to increase with annual additions of P fertilizer. Phosphorus retention mechanisms, however, are still much debated and difficult to prove or disprove. In an effort to determine whether the solubility of phosphate minerals controlled soil-solution P concentration in the field under some conditions, samples from the Ap of a Benndale sandy loam (Typic Paleudults) were collected from plots of a field experiment with different pH and P levels and analyzed in the laboratory. Several soil pH levels were first established (5.0–8.0); this was followed by annual additions for 7 yr of concentrated superphosphate at five rates varying from 0 to 392 kg P ha–1 yr–1 and cropping annually. Soil-solution composition was determined on samples taken 1, 3, and 5 yr after discontinuing P fertilization. Except for the "no P" treatment, solution P increased with increasing pH up to pH 5.8, then it decreased as pH increased, suggesting the accumulation of a basic phosphate mineral such as hydroxyapatite at about pH 5.8 and above. However, this was not matched by the ion activity product (IAP) for Ca5OH(PO4)3 or any other P mineral. For instance, at each P level, pCa5OH(PO4)3 decreased almost linearly with increasing pH so that each P level had one and only one pH at which pCa5OH(PO4)3 equalled 57.5, the accepted solubility product for hydroxyapatite. Thus, IAP's could not be used to predict, even indirectly, that solid-phase minerals were or were not controlling solution P. Sequential equilibration of selected soil samples with 0.01 M MgCl2, however, provided data that strongly supports the hypothesis that hydroxyapatite was present in a "high P, high pH" soil but not in a "low P, high pH" or a "high P, low pH" soil.


NOTES

1 Contribution from Dep. of Agronomy and Soils, Auburn Univ., Auburn, AL 36849. Financial support was provided by the National Fertilizer Development Center, TVA. Research sponsored in part by the Office of Health and Environmental Research, U.S. Dep. of Energy, under Contract no. DE-AC05-84OR21400 with Martin Marietta Energy Systems, Inc. Alabama Agric. Exp. Stn. Journal no. 3-861008.

2 Formerly Graduate Research Assistant and Professor, respectively, Dep. of Agronomy and Soils, Auburn Univ., Auburn, AL 36849. Senior author is presently Assistant Professor, Univ. of Washington, College of Forest Resources AR-10, Seattle, WA 98195.

Received for publication May 23, 1986.





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Copyright © 1987 by the Soil Science Society of America.