Plant-Available Phosphorus in Highly Concentrated Fertilizer Bands: Effects of Soil Type, Phosphorus Form, and Coapplied Potassium.

Journal: Journal Of Agricultural And Food Chemistry
Published:
Abstract

Phosphorus (P) is increasingly being applied in concentrated bands to satisfy plant nutrient requirements. To quantify changes in plant-available P in the fertosphere of highly concentrated fertilizer bands, we conducted a soil-fertilizer incubation experiment using seven soil types, three highly water-soluble P sources [monocalcium phosphate (MCP), monoammonium phosphate (MAP), and diammonium phosphate (DAP)], and coapplication of potassium chloride (KCl). First, we found that soil properties were important in influencing P availability. For a calcareous soil, availability was generally low irrespective of treatment, presumably due to precipitation of the fertilizer as Ca-P minerals. For all six noncalcareous soils, fertosphere pH was critical in determining potential P availability, with decreasing pH values decreasing availability, presumably due to precipitation of Al- and Fe-P minerals. Second, given the importance of pH, we also found that the form of P supplied (MCP, MAP, or DAP) had a pronounced effect on P availability due to associated changes in fertosphere pH. Finally, we also found that the coapplication of K also decreased P availability in some soils. We conclude that the selection of the P source is of utmost importance when fertilizers are placed as highly concentrated bands and that soil properties also need to be considered.

Authors
Gregor Meyer, Michael Bell, Casey Doolette, Gianluca Brunetti, Yaqi Zhang, Enzo Lombi, Peter Kopittke