The role of iron oxyhydroxides in phosphorus chemistry of some East Texas forest soils

Forest soil phosphorus (P) chemical behavior was evaluated in some mid-rotation fertilized loblolly pine (Pinus taeda L.) plantations in East Texas, that differed in their site drainage characteristics. Forest floor mass and carbon content in the forest floor were determined. Total P (PT) in the for...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Hass, Amir
Other Authors: Messina, Michael G
Format: Others
Language:en_US
Published: Texas A&M University 2006
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/1969.1/4346
id ndltd-tamu.edu-oai-repository.tamu.edu-1969.1-4346
record_format oai_dc
spelling ndltd-tamu.edu-oai-repository.tamu.edu-1969.1-43462013-01-08T10:38:27ZThe role of iron oxyhydroxides in phosphorus chemistry of some East Texas forest soilsHass, Amirphosphorusiron oxideForest soil phosphorus (P) chemical behavior was evaluated in some mid-rotation fertilized loblolly pine (Pinus taeda L.) plantations in East Texas, that differed in their site drainage characteristics. Forest floor mass and carbon content in the forest floor were determined. Total P (PT) in the forest floor, and total and Mehlich-1 P and citratedithionite (CD) and acid ammonium-oxalate (AAO) extractable P, Al, Fe, and Mn within the mineral soil upper 100 cm were determined. Colorimetric determination of AAOand CD-extractable P by the molybdenum blue ascorbic acid method, without the use of pre-digestion, was assessed by an automated continuous flow injection system. Phosphorus distribution between different operationally defined solid phases and its relationships with CD and AAO extractable Mn, Al, Fe among depth, site, drainage class and treatment were evaluated. Soil P forms were highly correlated with iron oxides across sites, drainage classes, treatments, and depth intervals with significant differences in P content and distribution in the soil profile and solid phases among drainage classes. Soil P distribution patterns differed among drainage classes, yet it followed the distribution of the iron oxides. Iron oxide’s role as a sink for soil P was higher in the well-drained compared to the poorly drained sites. Amorphous phases of iron oxides were higher in the poorly drained sites and dominated the role of iron oxides as a sink for P under the poor drainage conditions. Fertilization resulted in significantly higher forest floor mass, P content in the forest floor, and total P (PT) and CD-extractable P (Pd) in the soils’ upper 10 cm. The treatment effect on P in the forest floor, and on PT and Pd in the upper 10 cm of the mineral soil was equivalent to 6, 19, and 11% of the applied P, respectively. AAO-extractable P was highly correlated with Mehlich-1 P in the fertilized plots. Treatment and site drainage class effects on P accumulation in the different solid phases in the mineral soil and in the forest floor and the potential contribution of these pools to P availability in subsequent rotations, following clearcutting, are discussed.Texas A&M UniversityMessina, Michael G2006-10-30T23:30:27Z2006-10-30T23:30:27Z2005-082006-10-30T23:30:27ZBookThesisElectronic Dissertationtext2008144 byteselectronicapplication/pdfborn digitalhttp://hdl.handle.net/1969.1/4346en_US
collection NDLTD
language en_US
format Others
sources NDLTD
topic phosphorus
iron oxide
spellingShingle phosphorus
iron oxide
Hass, Amir
The role of iron oxyhydroxides in phosphorus chemistry of some East Texas forest soils
description Forest soil phosphorus (P) chemical behavior was evaluated in some mid-rotation fertilized loblolly pine (Pinus taeda L.) plantations in East Texas, that differed in their site drainage characteristics. Forest floor mass and carbon content in the forest floor were determined. Total P (PT) in the forest floor, and total and Mehlich-1 P and citratedithionite (CD) and acid ammonium-oxalate (AAO) extractable P, Al, Fe, and Mn within the mineral soil upper 100 cm were determined. Colorimetric determination of AAOand CD-extractable P by the molybdenum blue ascorbic acid method, without the use of pre-digestion, was assessed by an automated continuous flow injection system. Phosphorus distribution between different operationally defined solid phases and its relationships with CD and AAO extractable Mn, Al, Fe among depth, site, drainage class and treatment were evaluated. Soil P forms were highly correlated with iron oxides across sites, drainage classes, treatments, and depth intervals with significant differences in P content and distribution in the soil profile and solid phases among drainage classes. Soil P distribution patterns differed among drainage classes, yet it followed the distribution of the iron oxides. Iron oxide’s role as a sink for soil P was higher in the well-drained compared to the poorly drained sites. Amorphous phases of iron oxides were higher in the poorly drained sites and dominated the role of iron oxides as a sink for P under the poor drainage conditions. Fertilization resulted in significantly higher forest floor mass, P content in the forest floor, and total P (PT) and CD-extractable P (Pd) in the soils’ upper 10 cm. The treatment effect on P in the forest floor, and on PT and Pd in the upper 10 cm of the mineral soil was equivalent to 6, 19, and 11% of the applied P, respectively. AAO-extractable P was highly correlated with Mehlich-1 P in the fertilized plots. Treatment and site drainage class effects on P accumulation in the different solid phases in the mineral soil and in the forest floor and the potential contribution of these pools to P availability in subsequent rotations, following clearcutting, are discussed.
author2 Messina, Michael G
author_facet Messina, Michael G
Hass, Amir
author Hass, Amir
author_sort Hass, Amir
title The role of iron oxyhydroxides in phosphorus chemistry of some East Texas forest soils
title_short The role of iron oxyhydroxides in phosphorus chemistry of some East Texas forest soils
title_full The role of iron oxyhydroxides in phosphorus chemistry of some East Texas forest soils
title_fullStr The role of iron oxyhydroxides in phosphorus chemistry of some East Texas forest soils
title_full_unstemmed The role of iron oxyhydroxides in phosphorus chemistry of some East Texas forest soils
title_sort role of iron oxyhydroxides in phosphorus chemistry of some east texas forest soils
publisher Texas A&M University
publishDate 2006
url http://hdl.handle.net/1969.1/4346
work_keys_str_mv AT hassamir theroleofironoxyhydroxidesinphosphoruschemistryofsomeeasttexasforestsoils
AT hassamir roleofironoxyhydroxidesinphosphoruschemistryofsomeeasttexasforestsoils
_version_ 1716503480774950912