Os accruals como instrumento de manipulação de resultados
Mendes, Cláudia Araújo
2004
Fertilisation with compost: effects on soil phosphorus sorption and on phosphorus availability in acid soils.
Type
article
Creator
Identifier
MONTEIRO, M.C.H. (2019) - Fertilisation with compost: effects on soil phosphorus sorption and on phosphorus availability in acid soils. Open Journal of Soil Science. ISSN online 2162-5379. 9:12. P. 255-268.
2162-5379
10.4236/ojss.2019.912016
Title
Fertilisation with compost: effects on soil phosphorus sorption and on phosphorus availability in acid soils.
Subject
Ammonium lactate method
Olsen method
Sustainability of P fertilization
Standard phosphate requirement
Olsen method
Sustainability of P fertilization
Standard phosphate requirement
Date
2020-01-03T16:51:47Z
2020-01-03T16:51:47Z
2019
2020-01-03T16:51:47Z
2019
Description
Phosphate mineral fertilisers are manufactured from non-renewable resources.Soil fertilisation with composts is considered a good source of reuse nutrients such as phosphorus (P). The aim of this work was to evaluate the
effect of compost fertilisation on soil P sorption and consequently on P availability. It was done an incubation experiment followed by a sorption experiment in a low-P acid soil fertilised with compost (CP) or single superphosphate (SSP). The P application rates were: 0, 6.5, 13, 26 and 52 (kg∙P∙ha−1). In CP treatments, the rates 26 and 52 kg∙P∙ha−1 were achieved by adding SSP to CP since it was not allowed to incorporate into soil more than 170 kg∙N∙ha−1 from organic amendments. Although SSP has a higher proportion of easily available P than CP (86% vs 50%), the results showed that after 140 days of soil incubation, the available P was higher in CP treatments compared with SSP at the same rate of P application. The sorption experiment showed that after incubation of the fertilised soils, the P sorption maximum had lower values in treatments with CP in combination with SSP compared with only SSP fertilisation and the bonding energy had a deeper decrease in
the same treatments. Also, the Standard Phosphate Requirement decreased in the CP in combination with SSP treatments. The reduction of soil P sorption capacity after compost addition to soil highlights the need of reducing P fertilisation rates to achieve similar levels of available P compared with only SSP fertilisation.
info:eu-repo/semantics/publishedVersion
info:eu-repo/semantics/publishedVersion
Access restrictions
openAccess
http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/
http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/
Language
eng
Comments