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Effect of soil mineralogy on potassium fixation in soils developed on different parent material

Potassium release from weathering of soil minerals may support the K nutrition of crops for many years. However, when soils become exhausted, the response to K fertilisation may be limited due to its fixation in non-exchangeable forms, reducing the efficacy of K fertilisation. The present study exam...

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Bibliographic Details
Published in:Geoderma 2019-06, Vol.343, p.226-234
Main Authors: Portela, Ester, Monteiro, Fernando, Fonseca, Madalena, Abreu, Maria Manuela
Format: Article
Language:English
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Summary:Potassium release from weathering of soil minerals may support the K nutrition of crops for many years. However, when soils become exhausted, the response to K fertilisation may be limited due to its fixation in non-exchangeable forms, reducing the efficacy of K fertilisation. The present study examines the role of soil mineralogical composition on the K fixation characteristics of soils developed under a Mediterranean type of climate. Nine soils derived from different parent materials were collected in several regions of Portugal. Soil properties were determined, and clay, silt and fine-sand fractions were studied by X-ray diffraction. Potassium fixation was determined after the soil samples had been treated with increasing rates of K application. The amount of K fixed was obtained by difference, measuring the amount of K remaining extractable by ammonium acetate. The soils under study showed a relatively high K fixation capacity, varying between 30 and 80% for an application rate equivalent to 800 kg K ha−1. Soils with high K fixation capacity were derived from gabbros, gabbrodiorites and quarzdiorites, and had relevant amounts of vermiculites and/or interstratified mica-vermiculite minerals, either in the clay or in the silt and fine sand fractions. Soils rich in calcium carbonates also fix high amounts of K. These soils contain mica-illite minerals and are rich in some of the above-mentioned minerals in the clay and silt fractions. While K fixation capacity is normally assumed to derive from minerals in the clay fraction, the results of this study show that vermiculites and/or interstratified mica-vermiculites present in the silt and fine sand fractions can contribute a significant proportion of the total K fixation capacity and, thus, these size fractions should also be included in any assessment of K fixation capacity. •Soils with high K fixation are derived from gabbros, gabbrodiorites and quarzdiorites.•High K fixation capacity correlates with silt content of soils.•The pattern of K fixation in Alentejo soils was not previously reported in literature.•The % of K fixation in Alentejo soils increases with the amounts of K added.
ISSN:0016-7061
1872-6259
DOI:10.1016/j.geoderma.2019.02.040