175-9 Phosphorus Desorption Characteristics and Relationships of U.S. Soils.
See more from this Division: SSSA Division: Soils & Environmental QualitySee more from this Session: Organic P in Soil and Water Systems: Quantification, Bioavailability, Fate, and Transport
Monday, November 3, 2014: 3:25 PM
Long Beach Convention Center, Room 202C
Eutrophication and the contaminating of surface waters with phosphorus (P) is a major environmental issue throughout the United States. In many cases, sediment attributed to runoff and erosion from agricultural lands has been noted as a source of the P degrading waters. However, in order to improve P management at the watershed and farm and field scales, more information is needed on the behavior of P in soil. Thus, the objective of this research is to evaluate P sorption and desorption for a range of soils in the U.S. to develop better estimates of their potential to contribute P to surface waters. Key aspects to this study during the first year have revolved around the development of desorption curves and their relationships to the physical characteristics of the soils. The double-point anion exchange resin extraction method was used to measure desorption on surface horizons from 300 of the most common agricultural soils in the U.S., and the preliminary results have been compared to the clay content, carbon content, calcium carbonate content, pH, acid ammonium oxalate extractible aluminum and iron contents, Mehlich-3 P, and oxalate P characteristics of these soils. This presentation will summarize these results, discuss the correlations between total P fixation capacity and other soil properties, and summarize the development of an initial set of P-behavior interpretive groups of soils.
See more from this Division: SSSA Division: Soils & Environmental QualitySee more from this Session: Organic P in Soil and Water Systems: Quantification, Bioavailability, Fate, and Transport
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