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Phosphate stable oxygen isotope variability within a temperate agricultural soil.

Authors :
Granger, Steven J.
Harris, Paul
Peukert, Sabine
Guo, Rongrong
Tamburini, Federica
Blackwell, Martin S.A.
Howden, Nicholas J.K.
McGrath, Steve
Source :
Geoderma. Jan2017, Vol. 285, p64-75. 12p.
Publication Year :
2017

Abstract

In this study, we conduct a spatial analysis of soil total phosphorus (TP), acid extractable phosphate (PO 4 ) and the stable oxygen (O) isotope ratio within the PO 4 molecule (δ 18 O PO 4 ) from an intensively managed agricultural grassland site. Total P in the soil was found to range from 736 to 1952 mg P kg − 1 , of which between 12 and 48% was extractable using a 1 M HCl (HCl PO 4 ) solution with the two variables exhibiting a strong positive correlation. The δ 18 O PO 4 of the extracted PO 4 ranged from 17.0 to 21.6‰ with a mean of 18.8‰ (± 0.8). While the spatial variability of Total P has been researched at various scales, this is the first study to assess the variability of soil δ 18 O PO 4 at a field-scale resolution. We investigate whether or not δ 18 O PO 4 variability has any significant relationship with: (i) itself with respect to spatial autocorrelation effects; and (ii) HCl PO 4 , elevation and slope - both globally and locally. Results indicate that δ 18 O PO 4 was not spatially autocorrelated; and that δ 18 O PO 4 was only weakly related to HCl PO 4 , elevation and slope, when considering the study field as a whole. Interestingly, the latter relationships appear to vary in strength locally. In particular, the δ 18 O PO 4 to HCl PO 4 relationship may depend on the underlying soil class and/or on different field managements that had operated across an historical north-south field division of the study field, a division that had been removed four years prior to this study. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
00167061
Volume :
285
Database :
Academic Search Index
Journal :
Geoderma
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
119291101
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1016/j.geoderma.2016.09.020