Title of article :
Potassium release and fixation as a function of fertilizer application rate and soil parent material
Author/Authors :
Magnus Simonsson، نويسنده , , Stefan Andersson and Christer Svensson ، نويسنده , , Ylva Andrist-Rangel، نويسنده , , Stephen Hillier، نويسنده , , Lennart Mattsson، نويسنده , , Ingrid oborn، نويسنده ,
Issue Information :
روزنامه با شماره پیاپی سال 2007
Pages :
11
From page :
188
To page :
198
Abstract :
The issue of sustainable soil K management has partly been ignored during the last decades when the potential environmental impact from agricultural use of nitrogen and phosphorus has been considered a more important problem. It has become evident that mixed systems, especially under organic farming practices, commonly suffer from negative K field balances, which may deplete the soil in exchangeable K if release of K from soil minerals does not replace the amount of K that is harvested. In this study, release and fixation rates of K (kg ha− 1 yr− 1) were estimated in five long-term field experiments located on varying parent materials in South and Central Sweden, each having an array of K fertilizer application rates. The calculations were based on (i) accumulated K inputs and outputs from the soil during ca 30 yr, and on (ii) changes in topsoil and subsoil exchangeable K. The estimates ranged from ca 65 ± 7 kg ha− 1 yr− 1 of K released from soil reserves, to 85 ± 10 kg ha− 1 yr− 1 of K trapped by fixation. Release and fixation rates were highly dependent on the soil K balance, confirming that these are reversible processes that depend on plant uptake and fertilizer input. When receiving no K fertilizer, a loamy sand soil released 8 ± 10 kg ha− 1 yr− 1, which was less than the annual net K removal from this soil, 25 ± 4 kg ha− 1 yr− 1. Soils, with a texture from sandy loam to clay, showed release rates approaching the net K output, when not K fertilized. According to previous results, the pool of K extractable with 2 M HCl (KHCl) consists mainly of a fraction of the K in dioctahedral phyllosilicates. In the present investigation KHCl, corrected for exchangeable K, showed a significant response to soil K balance. More work is needed to yield a precise understanding of the mineralogical nature of this pool and how its measurement might be used to predict potential K release rates in soils.
Keywords :
potassium , Release , Weathering , Soil balance , fixation , Mineralogy
Journal title :
GEODERMA
Serial Year :
2007
Journal title :
GEODERMA
Record number :
1291930
Link To Document :
بازگشت