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Effect of Simulated Combined N and P on Soil Acidity within Soil Aggregates in Natural and Planted Korean Pine Forest in Northeast China

Authors :
Muhammad Atif Jamil
Anwaar Hussain
Wenbiao Duan
Lixin Chen
Kashif Khan
Kulsoom Abid
Changzhun Li
Qiwen Guo
Nowsherwan Zarif
Meixue Qu
Yafei Wang
Attaullah Khan
Source :
Forests; Volume 13; Issue 4; Pages: 529
Publication Year :
2022
Publisher :
Multidisciplinary Digital Publishing Institute, 2022.

Abstract

Globally, atmospheric nitrogen (N) deposition is rising, adversely impacting soil health, i.e., increasing soil acidity. While phosphorus (P) is the limiting element in the temperate environment and plays a key role in making the ecosystem more vulnerable to N-derived acidification. The impact of elevated N and P inputs on soil acidity and exchangeable base cations have been extensively studied; however, few studies have focused on these parameters, especially within various soil aggregate fractions in the temperate forest. In 2017, a field experiment was conducted under N and P additions with four soil aggregate fractions (>5 mm, 2–5 mm, 0.25–2 mm, and KPP. Thus, soil acidification is primarily caused by a decrease in base cations, such as Ca2+ and Mg2+, and increase in exchangeable Fe3+ and Al3+ ions in large macro-aggregates and macro-aggregates, which leads to the depletion of soil nutrients. The initial pH value (5.69) in >5 mm soil aggregate was decreased to (5.4) under high fertilizer application, while a minimum value of 5.36 was observed in 0.25–2 mm aggregates under high fertilizer application. The same trend was observed in all aggregates because of decrease in base cations, which, in turn, affects the vitality and health of the forests.

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
19994907
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Forests; Volume 13; Issue 4; Pages: 529
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....d8a0587d6bc5a692b1cc552558853fc4
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.3390/f13040529