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Phosphorus in alkaline soils of the semiarid region, Brazil: inorganic fractions, capacity factor, and availability.

Maria Regilene de Freitas Costa PaivaFábio Henrique Tavares de OliveiraWelka Preston Leite Batista da Costa AlvesMilene de Lima FariasMarx Lima da CunhaHernane Arllen Medeiros TavaresHelena Maria Morais Neta GóisMarina Beatriz da Silva Bezerra SantosJandeilson Alves de ArrudaLeilson Costa GrangeiroMarcio Gleybson da Silva BezerraFrancisco Vanies da Silva Sá
Published in: International journal of phytoremediation (2022)
The study was designed to quantify the contents of Pi fractions and correlate them with the P capacity factor of soils in the Brazilian semiarid region. We also evaluated the effect of soil P doses contact time and P availability for maize plants in alkaline soils of the Brazilian semiarid region. Soil samples were collected between the Piranhas-Açu (RN) and Jaguaribe (CE) rivers valleys. The maximum phosphate sorption capacity was highly correlated with the values of remaining P, indicating that it can be used as a measure to estimate the P capacity factor of these soils. Maximum P sorption capacity correlated with Fe 2 O 3 and Ca 2+ contents and pH values. These results demonstrate that P sorption is explained by P adsorption on the surface of iron oxides and by its precipitation with Ca 2+ in alkaline soils. The contact time increases promote plant P contents decreased substantially in the first 30 to 60 days after fertilization and decreased until 120 days of incubation but then tended to stabilize at the longest soil P contact times.
Keyphrases
  • heavy metals
  • organic matter
  • sewage sludge
  • human health
  • anaerobic digestion
  • plant growth
  • protein kinase
  • climate change