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  5. A novel biologically-based approach to evaluating soil phosphorus availability across complex landscapes

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Article
English
2015

A novel biologically-based approach to evaluating soil phosphorus availability across complex landscapes

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English
2015
Soil Biology and Biochemistry
Vol 88
DOI: 10.1016/j.soilbio.2015.05.016

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Davey L Jones
Davey L Jones

Bangor University

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Thomas H. DeLuca
Helen Glanville
M. C. Harris
+5 more

Abstract

Plants employ a range of strategies to increase phosphorus (P) availability in soil. Current soil P extraction methods (e.g. Olsen P), however, often fail to capture the potential importance of rhizosphere processes in supplying P to the plant. This has led to criticism of these standard approaches, especially in non-agricultural soils of low P status and when comparing soil types across diverse landscapes. Similarly, more complex soil P extraction protocols (e.g. Hedley sequential fractionation) lack functional significance from a plant ecology perspective. In response to this, we present a novel procedure using a suite of established extraction protocols to explore the concept of a protocol that characterizes P pools available via plant and microbial P acquisition mechanisms. The biologically based P (BBP) extraction was conducted by using four extractions in parallel: (1) 10 mM CaCl2 (soluble P); (2) 10 mM citric acid (chelate extractable P); (3) phytase and phosphatase solution (enzyme extractable organic P); (4) 1 M HCl (mineral occluded P). To test the protocol, we conducted the analyses on a total of 204 soil samples collected as part of a UK national ecosystem survey (Countryside Survey) in 1998 and repeated again in 2007. In the survey, Olsen P showed a net decline in national soil P levels during this 10 year period. In agreement with these results, soluble P, citrate extractable P and mineral occluded P were all found to decrease over the 10 year study period. In contrast, enzyme extractable organic P increased over the same period likely due to the accumulation of organic P in the mineral soil. The method illustrates a noted shift in P pools over the 10 year period, but no net loss of P from the system. This new method is simple and inexpensive and therefore has the potential to greatly improve our ability to characterise and understand changes in soil P status across complex landscapes.

How to cite this publication

Thomas H. DeLuca, Helen Glanville, M. C. Harris, Bridget A. Emmett, Melissa R. A. Pingree, Laura L. de Sosa, Cristina Cerdá-Moreno, Davey L Jones (2015). A novel biologically-based approach to evaluating soil phosphorus availability across complex landscapes. Soil Biology and Biochemistry, 88, pp. 110-119, DOI: 10.1016/j.soilbio.2015.05.016.

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Publication Details

Type

Article

Year

2015

Authors

8

Datasets

0

Total Files

0

Language

English

Journal

Soil Biology and Biochemistry

DOI

10.1016/j.soilbio.2015.05.016

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