Title of article :
Cadmium and zinc in soil solution extracts following the
application of phosphate fertilizers
Author/Authors :
Raphaël Lambert a، نويسنده , , Cynthia Grant Bowman، نويسنده , , Sébastien Sauvé، نويسنده , , ?، نويسنده ,
Issue Information :
روزنامه با شماره پیاپی سال 2007
Abstract :
This study investigated the solubility of cadmium and zinc in soils after the application of phosphate fertilizers containing those
two metals. The solubility of cadmium and zinc was assessed by measuring their concentration in soil water extracts. Three
monoammonium phosphate fertilizers containing various amounts of metals were applied on cultivated fields for 3 years at three
different rates. In order to investigate the effects of long-term applications of fertilizers on the solubility of Cd and Zn, a similar
design was used to apply contaminated fertilizers to soils in a laboratory experiment using a single fertilizer addition equivalent to
15 years of application. Phosphate fertilizers increased the concentration of Cd in soil extracts compared to control in 87% and 80%
of the treatments in field and laboratory experiments respectively. Both increasing the rate of application and using fertilizer
containing more Cd lead to higher Cd concentrations in extracts for the field and the laboratory experiments. The addition of the
equivalent of 15 years of fertilizer application in the laboratory results in higher Cd concentration in extracts compared to the field
experiment. For Zn, the fertilizer treatments enhanced the metal solution concentration in 83% of field treatments, but no
significant correlations could be found between Zn inputs and its concentration in solution. In the laboratory, fertilizer additions
increase the Zn concentrations in 53% of the treatments and decrease it in most of the other treatments. The decrease in Zn
concentrations in the laboratory trial is attributed to the higher phosphate concentrations in the soil solution; which is presumed to
have contributed to the precipitation of Zn-phosphates. For both trials, the metal concentrations in soil extracts cannot be related to
the Zn concentration in the fertilizer or the rate of application. The high Zn to Cd ratio is presumably responsible for the Cd
increase in the soil extracts due to competitive displacement by Zn. Finally, the observed acidification of soils with fertilizer
application will also contribute to metal solubilisation.
Keywords :
Cadmium , phosphate , Solubility , trace elements , zinc
Journal title :
Science of the Total Environment
Journal title :
Science of the Total Environment