Subsoil ‑ potassium depletion accounts for the nutrient budget in high ‑ potassium agricultural soils

Continuous potassium (K) removal without replenishment is progressively mining Argentinean soils. Our goals were to evaluate the sensitivity of soil‑K to K budgets, quantify soil‑K changes over time along the soil profile, and identify soil variables that regulate soil‑K depletion. Four on‑farm tria...

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Otros Autores: Correndo, Adrián Alejandro, Rubio, Gerardo, García, Fernando Oscar, Ciampitti, Ignacio Antonio
Formato: Artículo
Lenguaje:Inglés
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Acceso en línea:http://ri.agro.uba.ar/files/download/articulo/2021correndo.pdf
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024 |a 10.1038/s41598-021-90297-1 
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245 0 0 |a Subsoil ‑ potassium depletion accounts for the nutrient budget in high ‑ potassium agricultural soils 
520 |a Continuous potassium (K) removal without replenishment is progressively mining Argentinean soils. Our goals were to evaluate the sensitivity of soil‑K to K budgets, quantify soil‑K changes over time along the soil profile, and identify soil variables that regulate soil‑K depletion. Four on‑farm trials under two crop rotations including maize, wheat and soybean were evaluated. Three treatments were compared: (1) control (no fertilizer applied); (2) application of nitrogen, phosphorus, and sulfur fertilizers ‑NPS‑; and (3) pristine condition. After nine years, crops removed from 258 to 556 kg K ha−1. Only two sites showed a decline in the exchangeable‑K levels at 0–20 cm but unrelated to K budget. Topsoil exchangeable‑K levels under agriculture resulted 48% lower than their pristine conditions, although still above response levels. Both soil exchangeable‑K and slowly‑exchangeable K vertical distribution patterns (0–100 cm) displayed substantial depletion relative to pristine conditions, mainly concentrated at subsoil (20–100 cm), with 55–83% for exchangeable‑K, and 74–95% for slowly‑ exchangeable‑K. Higher pristine levels of exchangeable‑K and slowly‑exchangeable‑K and lower clay and silt contents resulted in higher soil‑K depletion. Soil K management guidelines should consider both topsoil and subsoil nutrient status and variables related to soil K buffer capacity. 
650 |2 Agrovoc  |9 26 
653 |a POTASSIUM 
653 |a SUBSOIL 
653 |a NUTRIENT BUDGET 
653 |a POTASSIUM 
700 1 |a Correndo, Adrián Alejandro  |u Kansas State University. Department of Agronomy. USA.  |9 32879 
700 1 |a Rubio, Gerardo  |u Universidad de Buenos Aires. Facultad de Agronomía. Instituto de Investigaciones en Biociencias Agrícolas y Ambientales (INBA). Buenos Aires, Argentina.  |u CONICET – Universidad de Buenos Aires. Instituto de Investigaciones en Biociencias Agrícolas y Ambientales (INBA). Buenos Aires, Argentina.  |9 6390 
700 1 |a García, Fernando Oscar  |u Universidad Nacional de Mar del Plata. Facultad de Ciencias Agrarias. Balcarce, Buenos Aires, Argentina.  |9 9707 
700 1 |a Ciampitti, Ignacio Antonio  |u Kansas State University. Department of Agronomy. USA.  |9 46012 
773 0 |t Scientific Reports  |g Vol.11 (2021), art. 11597, 10 p., tbls., grafs. 
856 |f 2021correndo  |i En internet  |q application/pdf  |u http://ri.agro.uba.ar/files/download/articulo/2021correndo.pdf  |x ARTI202311 
856 |u http://www.nature.com  |z LINK AL EDITOR 
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