Plant and Soil Effects of Alternative Sources of Phosphorus over Three Years of Application

Author:

Karpinska Anna1ORCID,Kakouli-Duarte Thomais1ORCID,Ashekuzzaman S.M.2,Byrne John1ORCID,Schmalenberger Achim3ORCID,Forrestal Patrick J.4

Affiliation:

1. enviroCORE, Department of Applied Sciences, South East Technological University, Carlow Campus, R93 V960 Carlow, Ireland

2. Department of Civil, Structural and Environmental Engineering, Munster Technological University, T12 P928 Cork, Ireland

3. Department of Biological Sciences, University of Limerick, V94 T9PX Limerick, Ireland

4. Teagasc, Environment, Soils and Land Use Research Department, Johnstown Castle, Y35 TC97 Wexford, Ireland

Abstract

Plant growth and food security depend heavily on phosphorus (P). Recovering and recycling P from animal, municipal, and food waste streams can significantly reduce dependency on traditional mineral P. This is particularly pertinent in the EU regions with limited native P supplies. The agronomic performance of including P-based recycling-derived fertilisers (two struvite and two ashes) or cattle slurry was compared to a conventional mineral P fertilisation programme along with no P and no fertiliser controls over three years. A field-scale experiment was set up to evaluate the perennial ryegrass dry matter yield (DMY), P uptake, and soil test P effects. Struvite, ash, and cattle slurry proved effective in replacing P mineral fertiliser and produced yields similar to those of the mineral fertiliser programme. Differences were observed in plant P recovery, with struvite-based programmes achieving a significantly higher P recovery than ash-based programmes, which had the lowest plant P recovery. Differences in Morgan’s soil test P were also noted, with potato waste struvite (PWS) and poultry litter ash (PLA) showing significantly higher soil test P values. The findings strongly indicate that a range of recycled bio-based fertilisers from the bioeconomy can be used to reduce reliance on conventional imported mineral P fertiliser, with some programmes based on recycled fertilisers even surpassing the performance of conventional linear economy mineral fertilisers.

Funder

Interreg Northwest Europe

Irish Research Council

Publisher

MDPI AG

Reference72 articles.

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