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Long-Term Fertilization Contributes to Carbon Saturation in Neutral-To-Alkaline Soils but not in Acidic Soils.

Authors :
Zhou, Shiwei
Lv, Yanchao
Song, Zhizhong
Bi, Xiaoli
Meng, Ling
Source :
Communications in Soil Science & Plant Analysis. 2024, Vol. 55 Issue 8, p1224-1235. 12p.
Publication Year :
2024

Abstract

The study investigated the adsorption of dissolved organic carbon (DOC) on Chinese soils from four long-term experiments involving five treatments: (1) no fertilization (control), (2–4) inorganic nitrogen (N), phosphorus (P), and potassium (K) fertilization (N, NP, and NPK), (5) NPK plus manure (NPKM). The results showed that DOC adsorption followed a modified Langmuir isotherm model effectively (R2 = 0.912 ~ 0.991). The maximum adsorption capacity (Qmax) (i.e. saturation deficits) generally increased with increasing soil organic carbon (SOC) due to fertilization in Luvic Phaeozem, Haplic Gypsisols, and Eutric Cambisols. However, it decreased significantly in acidic soils (Haplic Acrisols) from 15.59 g/kg for control, to 13.96, 13.03, 9.30 and 8.02 g/kg for N, NP, NPK and NPKM, respectively. Moreover, long-term fertilization, particularly with organic fertilization (e.g. NPKM), resulted in an increase of carbon (C) saturation by 1.42 g/kg (5.52%) in Luvic Phaeozem, 9.27 g/kg (44.29%) in Haplic Gypsisols, and 3.75 g/kg (27.66%) in Eutric Cambisols; however, there was a slight decrease by 1.70 g/kg (−7.49%) in Haplic Acrisols. Canonical correlation analysis (CCA) revealed that clay content and soil available iron (AFe) might be the crucial factors controlling C deficits, and subsequently, C saturation, along with current SOC. In conclusion, long-term fertilization contributed to C saturation in neutral-to-alkaline soils, but not in acidic soils. Thus, further attention should be paid to the long-term effects of fertilization on C saturation. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
00103624
Volume :
55
Issue :
8
Database :
Academic Search Index
Journal :
Communications in Soil Science & Plant Analysis
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
176179570
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1080/00103624.2024.2303095