Legacy soil phosphorus bioavailability in tropical and temperate soils: Implications for sustainable crop production — Paulo Sérgio Pavinato (2024) | RDL Network
Legacy soil phosphorus bioavailability in tropical and temperate soils: Implications for sustainable crop production
Soil and Tillage Research 244: 106228-106228
Article 2024 English
Authors
PP
Paulo Sérgio Pavinato
LG
Lenir Fátima Gotz
AT
Ana Paula Bettoni Teles
Abstract
2 min read
Improving phosphorus (P) use efficiency is key to improving the productivity and sustainability of cropping systems and slowing the exploitation rate of mineral P resources required for fertilizer production. At present, large amounts of added P in fertilizers and manure each year are retained in the soil and are not used by the crop. This ‘legacy P’ progressively accumulates in soil and represents an untapped P resource in tropical soils while in temperate soils it contributes to eutrophication. In the context of legacy P, the aim of this study was to quantify changes in soil P pools of contrasting bioavailability (determined using conventional chemical extraction procedures) during 12 successive brachiaria (Urochloa ruziziensis) cropping cycles in which no additional P was added. The study was undertaken in the greenhouse with 10 tropical (Brazil) and 6 temperate (UK) agricultural topsoils. Above-ground dry matter yield (DM) and P offtake was measured at each harvest alongside operationally-defined measures of the labile, moderately-labile and non-labile P pools at the start and end of the experiment. Over twelve repeated cultivation cycles, brachiaria demonstrated an ability to efficiently mine legacy P from all measurable soil pools across both sets of soils. This included the depletion of up to 87 % of non-labile soil P in some soils from the UK and up to 66 % from soils in Brazil after one year. While the amounts of initial labile P showed the closest positive relationship with plant P export, contrary to expectation the non-labile P pool also clearly contributed to plant nutrition across all the soils. As a cover crop, brachiaria clearly possesses traits which enable both the solubilization and efficient capture of soil P that can be harnessed to actively recycle historically non recalcitrant soil P fractions. Incorporating brachiaria into crop rotations or intercropping systems therefore shows promise as a strategy to enhance the longer-term sustainability of soil P management.
C.J. Nwaiwu, B. E. Madari, M. T. de M. Carvalho, PEDRO SCHMITT MARTINS PAIVA MATOS, A.O. Onunwa, C.O. Madueke, Emmanuel Chinweike Nnabuihe, Maduabuchi Okafor, Tochukwu Victor Nwosu
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