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Published in Soil Sci Soc Am J 58:1702-1708 (1994)
© 1994 Soil Science Society of America
677 S. Segoe Rd., Madison, WI 53711 USA
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Phosphorus Release Kinetics and Extractable Phosphorus after Long-term Fertilization

D. Steffens*

Institute for Plant Nutrition, Justus-Liebig-University Giessen, Südanlage 6, 35390 Giessen, Germany

* Corresponding author.

ABSTRACT

If different P fertilizers have been applied for a long time, it is difficult to measure the P availability. The objectives of this study were to investigate (i) the kinetics of soil P release by electroultrafiltration (EUF), (ii) extractable P using different soil extractants, (iii) plant P uptake, and (iv) the importance of considering both the P release kinetics and extractable P for plant P uptake prediction. This study was conducted with 15 European Alfisol topsoils with different histories of P and lime applications. The soils had received P as basic slag phosphate (BSP), superphosphate (SP), partially acidulated phosphate rock (PAPR), and phosphate rock (PR) for a long period. Plant P availability was measured in a 4-yr pot experiment with different plants. Phosphorus release kinetics analyzed by EUF were better described by the Elovich equation than by other diffusion functions. The Elovich b values, which can be used as an index of release rate, ranged from 53.5 to 140.0 mg P kg–1 soil min–1. These b values were more closely correlated to cumulative plant P uptake (r = 0.96) than P extracted with water (r = 0.90), calcium acetate-calcium lactate-acetic acid (CAL) (r = 0.89), Mehlich 3 (r = 0.81), and double lactate (r = 0.79). Only Elovich b values in the PAPR and PR treatments were significantly correlated to cumulative plant P uptake (r = 0.92). The cumulative plant P uptake of the 15 soils was well predicted with the fitted equation: y = 27.8 + (0.40 CAL P) + (0.83b), r = 0.99, where y denotes the plant P uptake and b is the Elovich b value (mg P kg–1 soil min–1) and CAL P is the adsorbed P. This indicates that considering the b value as a parameter for P release and the amount of CAL-extractable P for determining P availability following different fertilizer applications is a better estimation of plant P uptake than consideration of only one index of P availability.

Received for publication September 24, 1993.


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Copyright © 1994 by the Soil Science Society of America.