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Applied phosphorus is maintained in labile and moderately occluded fractions in a typical meadow steppe with the addition of multiple nutrients.

Authors :
Shao, Lingyu
Peng, Yang
Liu, Heyong
Zhao, Ruonan
Jiang, Liangchao
Li, Yang
Han, Peng
Jiang, Yong
Wei, Cunzheng
Han, Xingguo
Huang, Jianhui
Source :
Journal of Environmental Management. Nov2023, Vol. 345, pN.PAG-N.PAG. 1p.
Publication Year :
2023

Abstract

Phosphorus (P) is a limiting nutrient second only to nitrogen (N) in the drylands of the world. Most previous studies have focused on N transformation processes in grassland ecosystems, particularly under artificial fertilization with N and atmospheric N deposition. However, P cycling processes under natural conditions and when P is applied as an inorganic P fertilizer have been understudied. Therefore, it is essential to examine the fate of applied P in grassland ecosystems that have experienced long-term grazing and, under certain circumstances, continuous hay harvest. We conducted a 3-year field experiment with the addition of multiple nutrient elements in a typical meadow steppe to investigate the fate of the applied P in various fractions of P pools in the top soil. We found that the addition of multiple nutrients significantly increased P concentrations in the labile inorganic P (Lab-P i) and moderately occluded inorganic P (Mod-P i) fractions but not in the recalcitrant inorganic P (Rec-P i) fraction. An increase in the concentration of total inorganic P was found only when P and N were applied together. However, the addition of other nutrients did not change P concentrations in any fraction of the mineral soil. The addition of P and N significantly increased the total amount of P taken up by the aboveground plants but had no effect on the levels of organic and microbial P in the soil. Together, our results indicate that the P applied in this grassland ecosystem is taken up by plants, leaving most of the unutilized P as Lab-P i and Mod-P i rather than being immobilized in Rec-P i or by microbial biomass. This implies that the grassland ecosystem that we studied has a relatively low P adsorption capacity, and the application of inorganic P to replenish soil P deficiency in degraded grasslands due to long-term grazing of livestock or continuous harvest of forage in the region could be a practical management strategy to maintain soil P fertility. • P deficiency in grassland ecosystems is caused by overgrazing and hay harvest. • P cycling with additions of inorganic P in grasslands has been understudied. • Fate of inorganic P in multi-nutrient additions was studied in a meadow steppe. • Inorganic P addition increased P levels in labile and moderately occluded fractions. • Application rate of inorganic P in degraded grassland ecosystems is recommended. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
03014797
Volume :
345
Database :
Academic Search Index
Journal :
Journal of Environmental Management
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
172025089
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1016/j.jenvman.2023.118807