Author:
Bolland M. D. A.,Gilkes R. J.,Brennan R. F.
Abstract
Eighteen soils from south-western Australia were used to measure the
effectiveness of 2 reactive phosphate rocks (RPR) [North Carolina and
Sechura (Bayovar) RPRs] relative to superphosphate (relative
effectiveness, or RE) using (i) yield of dried shoots of
30-day-old wheat plants (REyield ),
(ii) P content of the dried shoots (RE
Pcontent ), and (iii) bicarbonate
soil test P (RE bicP ) as measures of effectiveness. The
RE values were positively related to PR dissolution in soil, titratable
acidity, and to P and Ca retention by soil, and were negatively related to
soil pH. No single soil property adequately predicted
REyield , RE Pcontent, or RE
bicP . Stepwise multiple regression indicated that: (1)
PR dissolution, soil pH, and organic carbon together accounted for about half
the variation in RE yield ; (2) organic C, soil pH, and
titratable acidity together accounted for about 67% of the variation in
RE Pcontent ; (3) PR dissolution, P retention capacity,
and titratable acidity together accounted for about 71% of the
variation in RE bicP . We conclude that the agronomic
effectiveness of phosphate rock fertilisers is a consequence of complex
interactions of phosphate rock with soil that cannot be adequately predicted
by measurements of a single soil property.
Subject
Earth-Surface Processes,Soil Science,Environmental Science (miscellaneous)
Cited by
10 articles.
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