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The impact of alum addition on organic P transformations in poultry litter and litter-amended soil.
- Source :
-
Journal of environmental quality [J Environ Qual] 2008 Feb 11; Vol. 37 (2), pp. 469-76. Date of Electronic Publication: 2008 Feb 11 (Print Publication: 2008). - Publication Year :
- 2008
-
Abstract
- Poultry litter treatment with alum (Al(2)(SO(4))(3) . 18H(2)O) lowers litter phosphorus (P) solubility and therefore can lower litter P release to runoff after land application. Lower P solubility in litter is generally attributed to aluminum-phosphate complex formation. However, recent studies suggest that alum additions to poultry litter may influence organic P mineralization. Therefore, alum-treated and untreated litters were incubated for 93 d to assess organic P transformations during simulated storage. A 62-d soil incubation was also conducted to determine the fate of incorporated litter organic P, which included alum-treated litter, untreated litter, KH(2)PO(4) applied at 60 mg P kg(-1) of soil, and an unamended control. Liquid-state (31)P nuclear magnetic resonance indicated that phytic acid was the only organic P compound present, accounting for 50 and 45% of the total P in untreated and alum-treated litters, respectively, before incubation and declined to 9 and 37% after 93 d of storage-simulating incubation. Sequential fractionation of litters showed that alum addition to litter transformed 30% of the organic P from the 1.0 mol L(-1) HCl to the 0.1 mol L(-1) NaOH extractable fraction and that both organic P fractions were more persistent in alum-treated litter compared with untreated litter. The soil incubation revealed that 0.1 mol L(-1) NaOH-extractable organic P was more recalcitrant after mixing than was the 1.0 mol L(-1) HCl-extractable organic P. Thus, adding alum to litter inhibits organic P mineralization during storage and promotes the formation of alkaline extractable organic P that sustains lower P solubility in the soil environment.
Details
- Language :
- English
- ISSN :
- 0047-2425
- Volume :
- 37
- Issue :
- 2
- Database :
- MEDLINE
- Journal :
- Journal of environmental quality
- Publication Type :
- Academic Journal
- Accession number :
- 18268310
- Full Text :
- https://doi.org/10.2134/jeq2007.0239