Abstract
A range of soils from eastern Australia hare been examined for a number of fractions of soil sulphur. These have been compared with plant sulphur uptake and yield of oats grown in pot culture in order to assess their possible values as indices of available sulphur. In all of the soils examined, most of the sulphur was present in organic forms and in most cases at least 50 per cent. could be extracted by 0.1N sodium hydroxide. Similar amounts were released as sulphate by ignition of the soil and similar amounts were also estimated by a reduction method. These three fractions were highly correlated with one another and with the total sulphur, but each was poorly correlated with the sulphur uptake and yield of oats in pot culture experiments. The results indicated that an appreciable proportion of the soil sulphur may consist of organic sulphates. The amounts of free water-soluble sulphate were small and were unsatisfactory as indices of yield. In addition to free sulphate, aqueous extracts also contained some organic sulphur which was easily oxidized to free sulphate by dilute hydrogen peroxide. The amount of water-soluble sulphur could be substantially increased by heating the soil prior to extraction. The fraction of the soil sulphur which was extracted after heating with water on a boiling water-bath, followed by heating for 1 hr in a hot-air oven (heat-soluble sulphur), was found to be highly correlated with both sulphur uptake and yield of oats grown in pot culture. It seems likely that this heat-soluble fraction ma3 provide a satisfactory index of available sulphur.
Subject
General Agricultural and Biological Sciences
Cited by
359 articles.
订阅此论文施引文献
订阅此论文施引文献,注册后可以免费订阅5篇论文的施引文献,订阅后可以查看论文全部施引文献
1. Assessment of the sustainability of land use systems through sensitive indicators of soil quality and biophysical properties in temperate ecosystem;Egyptian Journal of Soil Science;2024-12-01
2. Modeling and Spatial Variability of Soil Nutrients - A Case from Soil Health Card Project, India;International Journal of Environment and Geoinformatics;2024-09-10
3. Integrating Nano-Fertilizers with Mineral-Based Nutrients for Growth, Energy Efficiency, Economics, and Environmental Sustainability in Wheat crop;International Journal of Plant Production;2024-08-02
4. Can gypsum and organic amendments achieve sustainability, productivity and maintain soil health under soybean-mustard cropping in sodic soils of western India;Soil and Tillage Research;2024-08
5. PCA and fuzzy clustering-based delineation of soil nutrient (S, B, Zn, Mn, Fe, and Cu) management zones of sub-tropical Northeastern India for precision nutrient management;Journal of Environmental Management;2024-08