Litcius/Paper detail

Considering Soil Potassium Pools with Dissimilar Plant Availability

M. J. Bell, M.D. Ransom, Michael L. Thompson, Philippe Hinsinger, A. M. Florence, P. W. Moody, Chris Guppy

202034 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Abstract Soil potassium (K) has traditionally been portrayed as residing in four functional pools: solution K, exchangeable K, interlayer (sometimes referred to as “fixed” or “nonexchangeable”) K, and structural K in primary minerals. However, this four-pool model and associated terminology have created confusion in understanding the dynamics of K supply to plants and the fate of K returned to the soil in fertilizers, residues, or waste products. This chapter presents an alternative framework to depict soil K pools. The framework distinguishes between micas and feldspars as K-bearing primary minerals, based on the presence of K in interlayer positions or three-dimensional framework structures, respectively; identifies a pool of K in neoformed secondary minerals that can include fertilizer reaction products; and replaces the “exchangeable” K pool with a pool defined as “surface-adsorbed” K, identifying where the K is located and the mechanism by which it is held rather than identification based on particular soil testing procedures. In this chapter, we discuss these K pools and their behavior in relation to plant K acquisition and soil K dynamics.

Topics & Concepts

ConfusionPotassiumFertilizerMineralogyChemistrySoil scienceGeologyGeochemistryEnvironmental sciencePsychoanalysisOrganic chemistryPsychologyClay minerals and soil interactionsIron oxide chemistry and applicationsSoil and Unsaturated Flow