Litcius/Paper detail

Potassium Reserves in the Clay Fraction of a Tropical Soil Fertilized for Three Decades

Ruan Francisco Firmano, Vander Freitas Melo, Célia Regina Montes, Adilson de Oliveira, C. de Castro, Luís Reynaldo Ferracciú Alleoni

2020Clays and Clay Minerals31 citationsDOI

Abstract

Abstract Highly weathered soils of the humid tropics generally provide a poor mineral reserve of potassium (K), but evidence has been found which indicates that even in such soils non-exchangeable forms of K can be made plant available and this warrants further investigation. The objective of this study was, therefore, to determine the extent to which K can be released from poorly available reserves over a long period of time. The focus was on an Oxisol in southern Brazil cultivated for 32 years with a rotation of soybeans ( Glycine max L.), maize ( Zea mays L.), wheat ( Triticum aestivum L.), and oats ( Avena strigosa L.) with and without K fertilization. Mineral sources of K were identified by X-ray diffraction and by sequential chemical extraction from the clay fraction. The amounts of K-bearing mineral species and the amounts of total and plant-available K were quantified, then the effects of the long-term K-fertilization regime on these values were evaluated. The clay fraction was dominated by hematite, gibbsite, and phyllosilicates such as kaolinite. These minerals were unaffected by the K deprivation in the cropping systems, but in the clay fraction the absence of K fertilization for 32 years reduced the structural order of the 2:1 phyllosilicates associated with K reserves. This effect was most prominent in the root zone of the soil. Deprivation of K for more than three decades decreased the crystallinity of 2:1 phyllosilicates, which could be better evaluated from XRD patterns after the removal of kaolinite and Fe (oxyhydr)oxides. The K-free cultivation reduced the amounts of total soil K by increasing the depletion of K from pools that typically are poorly accessible to plants.

Topics & Concepts

BiogeosciencesClay mineralsFraction (chemistry)PotassiumClay soilGeologySoil waterAgronomySoil scienceGeochemistryChemistryEarth scienceBiologyOrganic chemistryClay minerals and soil interactionsSoil Management and Crop YieldSoil and Unsaturated Flow