Artículo
Soil type affects biological phosphorus cycling more than soil management
Frasier, Ileana
; Noellemeyer, Elke Johanna; Gili, Adriana Anahi
; Gómez, María Florencia; Uhaldegaray, Mauricio; Quiroga, Alberto; Fernandez, Romina; Alvarez, María Lucila
Fecha de publicación:
08/2022
Editorial:
Elsevier Science
Revista:
Geoderma
ISSN:
0016-7061
Idioma:
Inglés
Tipo de recurso:
Artículo publicado
Clasificación temática:
Resumen
There is a need for more sustainable management of phosphorus (P) fertilization including reutilization of wastes and taking more advantage of the biological cycling of P in the crop-livestock-soil system to comply with the Sustainable Development Goals. The objective of the present study was to evaluate the effect of soil type and management on microbial carbon (C) and P transformations (mineralization-immobilization processes) and their seasonal fluctuations throughout the year to assess the feasibility of enhancing biological P cycling by changing crop rotations. A sandy loam petrocalcic Paleustoll with a calcium carbonate hardpan at approximately 0.8 m depth, and a sandy typic Ustipsamment were selected in the Argentinean semiarid Pampa. Soil management treatments were a 50-year-old Weeping Lovegrass pasture (PP) and three agricultural plots belonging to long-term trials with and without cover crops under no-till: maize monoculture (M−M), maize-rye (M−R), and maize-vetch (M−V). Soil microbial biomass C and P (MBC, MBP), soil respiration, metabolic quotient, P mineralization rate, and anion exchange membrane extractable P (solution P) were determined during winter and spring of 2017, and summer and autumn of 2018 at 0–0.05 and 0.05–0.10 m depth. Results indicated that differences in the relationships between MBP and MBC were mostly influenced by soil type. In the Paleustoll, this relationship showed a threshold value of 94.7 µg MBC g−1 where soil microbial biomass P reached a maximum value of 6.6 ug MBP g−1. No relationship between P mineralization rate and MBP was observed in this soil indicating P limitation explained by the negative relationship between exchangeable calcium and solution P. On contrary, a positive and linear relationship between MBP and MBC was found in the Ustipsamment, which was affected by the season of the year. A nonlinear relationship between metabolic quotient and MBP was found in the Ustipsamment but not in the Paleustoll. Soil management was more related to microbe-plant P competition during periods of active growth in the Paleustoll, while in the non-P limited soil (Ustipsamment), environmental conditions and the presence of active rhizosphere stimulate microbial activity, shown by seasonal variations, increasing P mineralization rates to sustain microbial and plant P demand.
Palabras clave:
MICROBIAL BIOMASS P AND C
,
P MINERALIZATION
,
SEASONAL CHANGES
,
SOIL TEXTURE
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Identificadores
Colecciones
Articulos(SEDE CENTRAL)
Articulos de SEDE CENTRAL
Articulos de SEDE CENTRAL
Citación
Frasier, Ileana; Noellemeyer, Elke Johanna; Gili, Adriana Anahi; Gómez, María Florencia; Uhaldegaray, Mauricio; et al.; Soil type affects biological phosphorus cycling more than soil management; Elsevier Science; Geoderma; 426; 8-2022; 1-12
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