Journal article

Phosphorus cycling and spring barley crop response to varying redox potential


Authors listBaumann, Karen; Nastah, Samer; Shaheen, Sabry M.; Rinklebe, Joerg; Leinweber, Peter

Publication year2020

JournalVadose Zone Journal

Volume number19

Issue number1

eISSN1539-1663

Open access statusGold

DOI Linkhttps://doi.org/10.1002/vzj2.20088

PublisherWiley


Abstract
For arable soils, it is not clear whether closing a controlled drainage system leads to P mobilization due to water table rise and associated changes in redox-induced biogeochemical processes. Therefore, we investigated P mobilization at different redox conditions using three spring barley (Hordeum vulgare L.) cropped lysimeters filled with monoliths of arable northeastern German soil profiles. Pore water samples were collected weekly from three different depths, and dissolved (<0.45 mu m) element concentrations of total C, P, Al, Fe, Mn, Ca, Mg, and K, as well as inorganic and organic C (DIC and DOC) and P (P-i and P-o), SO42--S, and NO2--N and NO3--N were determined. The total P concentration in pore water collected from a given lysimeter at a given time was 1.8 mg P L(-)1 maximum. Organic P concentrations in subsoil solutions were positively correlated with Fe concentrations. Grain yield of spring barley ranged between 5.6 and 6.5 Mg ha(-)1, and total biomass P uptake was negatively correlated with the stable P stocks of the soil profiles. Results suggest that reductive conditions in subsoils led to dissolution of pedogenic Fe-(oxy)hydroxides and release of P-o compounds, the latter of which were more important for biomass P uptake than P released from stable P compounds. Overall, closing the drainage at the field site could represent a moderate P mobilization risk, which would probably be lower compared with a P mobilization risk caused by a heavy rainfall event.



Citation Styles

Harvard Citation styleBaumann, K., Nastah, S., Shaheen, S., Rinklebe, J. and Leinweber, P. (2020) Phosphorus cycling and spring barley crop response to varying redox potential, Vadose Zone Journal, 19(1), Article e20088. https://doi.org/10.1002/vzj2.20088

APA Citation styleBaumann, K., Nastah, S., Shaheen, S., Rinklebe, J., & Leinweber, P. (2020). Phosphorus cycling and spring barley crop response to varying redox potential. Vadose Zone Journal. 19(1), Article e20088. https://doi.org/10.1002/vzj2.20088



Keywords


DRYING-REWETTING FREQUENCYmobilization


SDG Areas


Last updated on 2025-10-06 at 11:21