175-8 Extractable Soil Phosphorus Concentrations As Determined By Molybdate Colorimetric Procedures and ICP: Influence of Soil Properties.

See more from this Division: SSSA Division: Soils & Environmental Quality
See more from this Session: Organic P in Soil and Water Systems: Quantification, Bioavailability, Fate, and Transport
Monday, November 3, 2014: 3:10 PM
Long Beach Convention Center, Room 202C
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Eric O. Young, Miner Institute, Chazy, NY, Donald S. Ross, Jeffords Hall Rm 260, University of Vermont, Burlington, VT and Bruce Hoskins, University of Maine, Orono, ME
Evaluating agronomic soil phosphorus (P) availability is based on two foundational concepts: i) Extraction and measurement of a labile pool of molybdate-reactive P (presumed to be mostly orthophosphate), and ii) Relating this concentration of P to a crop-specific calibration curve to estimate P fertilizer need.  While soil test extractants and specific P guidelines vary by state (e.g., adjustments for pH, crop type, broad cast vs. banded, etc.), soil organic P (Po) is generally unaccounted for in agronomic and environmental recommendations.  Research has shown that Po mineralization can contribute substantially to the plant-available P pool and to losses in surface and subsurface runoff water.  We compared P concentrations in soil extracts (either the Modified Morgan or Morgan solution) measured by standard molybdate colorimetric procedures versus P concentrations measured by ICP across a wide range of agricultural and riparian samples.  Samples were collected by standard agronomic sampling procedures in the field and represent mostly Ap horizons.  In general, ICP measured greater P concentrations in extracts across all samples.  Differences were greater in lower P testing soils with higher organic matter content.  For example, in one riparian data set, P concentrations measured by ICP were as much as 1.7-fold greater than measured by molybdate colorimetric procedures, indicating the potential importance of labile organic P and/unreactive P complexes.  On a large agricultural soil sample set from Vermont (n = 29,437), P measured by ICP was only 7% greater on average compared P measured by molybdate reaction. Results suggest further research is needed to better characterize labile organic P forms in soil extracts.
See more from this Division: SSSA Division: Soils & Environmental Quality
See more from this Session: Organic P in Soil and Water Systems: Quantification, Bioavailability, Fate, and Transport
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