Sustainable regulation of calcium magnesium phosphate and rapeseed cake on soil-tea system in Mount Lushan, China
Author:
Han Chao1, Ding Yuan1, Lai YuQi1, Tang ZiJin1, Liu Min2
Affiliation:
1. College of Environment and Chemical Engineering, Nanchang Hangkong University 2. Jiangxi Ecological Environment Monitoring Center
Abstract
Abstract
Lushan Yunwu tea quality is limited by soil acidity and sterility. This article examined a three-year localization experiment at 1100 m altitude to demonstrate the sustainable management of conditioners, calcium magnesium phosphate (P), rapeseed cake (C), and combination application (P + C) by one-time application on the soil-tea system in Mount Lushan. The study found that conditioners (P, C, P + C) reduced soil acidification and maintained a pH of 4.75–5.34, ideal for tea tree development for three years. Phosphorus activation coefficient (PAC), nitrogen activation coefficient (NAC), and organic matter (OM) content were significantly higher (P < 0.05) in the first year after conditioner treatment, with P + C being the best. After P + C, PAC, NAC, and OM rose by 31.25%, 47.70%, and 10.06 g·kg-1 compared to CK. In comparison to the CK, tea's hundred-bud weight (BW), free amino acids (AA), tea polyphenols (TPC), and chlorophyll (Chl) content of P + C treatment got 29.98%, 14.41%, 22.49%, and 28.85% increase compared to that of the CK, respectively. In the second year, the three treatments of P, C and P + C still had significant moderating effects on the physicochemical properties of the soil and the quality indexes of the tea leaves. The PAC of the soil under the three treatments increased by 0.06%, 0.07% and 0.18%, respectively, as compared to the control.P + C increased BW, AA, TPC and Chl of tea for two years. Three conditioners had two-year regulatory impacts on soil fertility indicators, tea output, and quality. C and P + C both increased soil OM by 18.59% and 21.78% compared to CK in the third year, outperforming P treatment. Redundancy analysis revealed that the primary physicochemical factors influencing tea output and quality were soil OM and pH, with available phosphorus, urease, acid phosphatase, and available nitrogen following closely afterwards.
Publisher
Springer Science and Business Media LLC
Reference23 articles.
1. Fu, J. Y., Zhu, X. F. (2008) Analysis on soil nutrient in different altitudes of Lushan. Journal of Anhui Agri Sci, 14(15), 73–74. [In Chinese] 2. Ding, Y., Zhang, B. L. (2017) Changes in tea biochemical indexes and soil physicochemical properties at different altitude ranges of Lushan Mountain. Journal of Anhui Agricultural University, 44(06), 959–962. [In Chinese] 3. Yang, W., Li, C., Wang, S., Zhou, B., Mao, Y., Rensing, C., & Xing, S. (2021). Influence of biochar and biochar-based fertilizer on yield, quality of tea and microbial community in an acid tea orchard soil. Applied Soil Ecology, 166, 104005. https://doi.org/10.1016/J.APSOIL.2021.104005 4. Xu, B. (2023). Effect of Partial Replacement of Chemical Fertilizer with Organic Fertilizer on Soil Physicochemical Properties in Wuyishan Tea Gardens. China Tea, 45(11), 58–62. [In Chinese] 5. Babla, M., Katwal, U., Yong, M. T., Jahandari, S., Rahme, M., Chen, Z. H., & Tao, Z. (2022). Value-added products as soil conditioners for sustainable agriculture. Resources, Conservation and Recycling, 178, 106079. https://doi.org/10.1016/J.RESCONREC.2021.106079
|
|