Author:
Babare A. M.,Gilkes R. J.,Sale P. W. G.
Abstract
Summary. The dissolution of North Carolina phosphate
rock (NCPR) in soil was investigated in a laboratory study using surface soils
sampled from 28 permanent pasture sites. The relationships between phosphorus
(P) dissolved, P availability and various soil properties were investigated
using simple and multiple linear regression and the findings related to the
relative effectiveness of NCPR for pasture production at the sites. The extent
of dissolution of NCPR was positively correlated to P buffering capacity
(r2 = 0.42). Phosphorus
buffering capacity and titratable acidity together accounted for 72% of
the variance in dissolution. Bicarbonate-extractable P
(‘available’ P) generally increased as dissolution increased.
However, the increase in available P was consistently lower for soils with
higher P buffering capacity. The proportion of dissolved P that was available
also decreased with increasing P buffering capacity
(r2 = 0.63). Consequently,
the increase in available P was highest for soils with very low to low P
buffering capacity. This suggests that the effectiveness of NCPR as a
fertiliser may be more closely related to the availability of dissolved P,
than to the amount of NCPR dissolved in a soil. Consistent with this
laboratory finding, the agronomic effectiveness of NCPR relative to
superphosphate measured in the field tended to decrease with increasing P
buffering capacity. The agronomic effectiveness of NCPR was comparable with
superphosphate only at certain sites, and with some noted exceptions, most of
these had surface soils with very low to low P buffering capacity. The high
relative effectiveness of NCPR at these sites was mostly attributed to the
loss of superphosphate by leaching. Since NCPR dissolves much more slowly than
superphosphate, only a small amount of the P applied as NCPR would be lost
during leaching events. Slow dissolution of the remaining NCPR probably
supplied a small amount of dissolved P over an extended period of time, and
due to the low P buffering capacity, much of this was available to plants.
Subject
General Agricultural and Biological Sciences
Cited by
16 articles.
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