Home  /  Agronomy  /  Vol: 9 Núm: 1 Par: January (2019)  /  Article
ARTICLE
TITLE

Sensitivity of Three Phosphate Extraction Methods to the Application of Phosphate Species Differing in Immediate Plant Availability

SUMMARY

Extractive tests for determining the plant-availability of soil phosphorus (P) give varying results due to the inherently different characteristics of the extraction solution. Generally, classical soil P tests such as the Olsen or calcium acetate/lactate (CAL) method do not give an indication on the total amount of plant available P, but merely give an indication of the equilibrium between soil and extraction solution. It is also not entirely clear which fractions of P are directly determined through the various methods of extraction, i.e., determined P must not be immediately plant available, as is the case for rock phosphate. It is therefore possible that extraction methods either over or under estimate the amount of P available for plant consumption. In this research, we compared three methods of soil P determination (CAL, Olsen and diffusive gradients in thin films (DGT)) with regards to their ability to determine P species (Ca(H2PO4)2, CaHPO4, Ca3(PO4)2 and Inositol-6-hexakisphosphate) added to soils of high sorption capacity, immediately after as well as two weeks after application. For each of the methods, it could be shown that sorption processes in the soil immediately (0 days incubation) fix P to a point where it is not extractable through any of the described methods. These sorption processes continue over time, leading to a further decrease of determined P. The acidic CAL extraction method gives higher results of extractable P compared to the Olsen method. Due to the extraction of Ca3(PO4)2, the CAL method may overestimate immediately plant-available P. The most suitable methods for the determination of immediately plant available P may therefore be the Olsen and DGT methods. Organic IP6 is not determined by any of the extraction methods. At low concentrations of soil P, the DGT method may fail to give results.

 Articles related

Anni Yuniarti,Islamy Hasan Hermawan,Rija Sudirja,Dirga Sapta Sara    

The Inceptisols have the potential to be developed into rice cultivation land because it is widely distributed in Indonesia but it has a low of soil fertility. Fertilization of N, P, K and Nano Silica fertilizers are efforts to provide nutrients for rice... see more


Yanuar Euro Andrian,Anni Yuniarti,Rina Devnita    

Sweet corn is one of the profitable crops with high prospect in Indonesia. Unfornately corn production in Indonesia remained low. This experiment aimed to determine the effect of biofertilizer application along with N, P and K fertilizer Towards phosphor... see more


Futri Fauziah,Emma Trinurani Sofyan,Ade Setiawan,Dirga Sapta Sara,Warid Ali Qosim    

In the past decade, Indonesian interest towards sweet corn has increased. This condition creates a wide market opportunity for sweet corn. However, sweet corn cultivation in Indonesia is often constrained by low soil fertility. One of the essential nutri... see more


Marie Školníková,Petr Škarpa,Eliška Rumpová,Peter Kovácik    

Article Details: Received: 2020-09-28 | Accepted: 2020-10-14 | Available online: 2020-12-31https://doi.org/10.15414/afz.2020.23.04.198-204 The aim of the vegetation pot experiment observed the effect of zinc foliar application in combination with ni... see more


Jabeen Farheen,Simeen Mansoor    

Green gram (Vigna radiata) is considered the chief legume in Pakistan. Thus, current study was conducted to examine the ameliorating effect of phytohormones pre-treatments under salt stress on proteome profile of green gram by sodium-dodecyl-sulphate-pol... see more