The fate of phosphorus fertilizer in Amazon soya bean fields

Author:

Riskin Shelby H.12,Porder Stephen1,Neill Christopher2,Figueira Adelaine Michela e Silva3,Tubbesing Carmen1,Mahowald Natalie4

Affiliation:

1. Department of Ecology and Evolutionary Biology, Brown University, Providence, RI, USA

2. Ecosystems Center, Marine Biological Laboratory, Woods Hole, MA, USA

3. Instituto de Ciências da Educação, Universidade Federal do Oeste do Pará, Santarem, PA, Brazil

4. Department of Earth and Atmospheric Science, Cornell University, Ithaca, NY, USA

Abstract

Fertilizer-intensive soya bean agriculture has recently expanded in southeastern Amazonia, and whereas intensive fertilizer use in the temperate zone has led to widespread eutrophication of freshwater ecosystems, the effects in tropical systems are less well understood. We examined the fate of fertilizer phosphorus (P) by comparing P forms and budgets across a chronosequence of soya bean fields (converted to soya beans between 2003 and 2008) and forests on an 800 km 2 soya bean farm in Mato Grosso, Brazil. Soya bean fields were fertilized with 50 kg P ha −1 yr −1 (30 kg P ha −1 yr −1 above what is removed in crops). We used modified Hedley fractionation to quantify soil P pools and found increases in less-plant-available inorganic pools and decreases in organic pools in agricultural soils compared with forest. Fertilizer P did not move below 20 cm. Measurements of P sorption capacity suggest that while fertilizer inputs quench close to half of the sorption capacity of fast-reacting pools, most added P is bound in more slowly reacting pools. Our data suggest that this agricultural system currently has a low risk of P losses to waterways and that long time-scales are required to reach critical soil thresholds that would allow continued high yields with reduced fertilizer inputs.

Publisher

The Royal Society

Subject

General Agricultural and Biological Sciences,General Biochemistry, Genetics and Molecular Biology

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