Download presentation
Presentation is loading. Please wait.
Published byGervais Miles Modified over 9 years ago
1
David Kissel and Leticia Sonon University of Georgia
Spatial Variability of Soil pH and its Relationship to N Reactions in Soil David Kissel and Leticia Sonon University of Georgia
3
Why is subsoil pH important?
4
Low subsoil pH can result in toxic levels of Al+3 that can restrict root growth and the amount of water available to the crop.
5
Relationship between pHCaCl2 and
KCl Extractable Aluminum, 90 NAPT Soils 120 100 Critical pH 4.85 80 For Saturated Paste pH the value is 5.40 60 KCl Extr. Al (mg/kg) 40 20 3.0 3.5 4.0 4.5 5.0 5.5 6.0 6.5 7.0 7.5 8.0 Soil pH (1:1) CaCl2 Miller et al. 2003
6
Soil pHw with depth, Cabin Field
Depth (inches) pH S pH N 0-12 5.5 12-24 6.2 5.2 24-36 6.6 36-48 6.1 5.4 48-60 5.0
7
Water Remaining (%), Cabin Field
Date S 12” S 20” S 28” N 12” N 20” N 28” 6/12 85 90 92 100 99 6/22 70 72 64 93 95 7/1 48 2 62 69 7/8 25 1 37 7/18 78 11 87 7/29 55 84
8
Soil pH in Cabin Field (Cotton)
Sampling Depth Short (55 cm) Medium (85 cm) Tall (130 cm)
9
Soil pHw vs depth, NWCrisp Co
Depth inches Site 1 Site 2 Site 3 Site 4 Site 5 Site 6 0-6 5.8 6.2 5.7 5.3 6.1 6-12 5.6 6.0 5.2 5.9 12-24 4.9 5.5 4.8 5.0 24-36 36-48 4.5
10
What role might nitrogen nutrition have in the formation of subsoil acidity?
11
September 1998, ammonium (kg N/ha) distribution with depth.
Depth (cm) North Center South 0-15 0.18 0.32 0.35 15-30 0.64 0.60 1.50 30-45 1.42 2.44 3.07 45-60 1.17 3.36 2.89 60-90 2.55 5.43 3.70 90-120 1.87 4.98 6.74
12
What is the possible role of high levels of ammonium on soil pH, especially for subsoil layers?
13
“Plant uptake of a cation must be accompanied by uptake of an anion of equal charge or by the extrusion of H+ or other cations. The reverse is true for uptake of anions.” (C. Tang and Z. Rengel, Handbook of Soil Acidity; Marcel Dekker, Inc.
14
Some ions in soils used by crops
Cations (positive) potassium K+ calcium Ca++ Magnesium Mg++ zinc Zn++ Manganese Mn++ Iron Fe++ Copper Cu++ Ammonium NH4+ Anions (negative) nitrate NO3- sulfate SO4-- Phosphate HPO4 - Borate H2BO3- Molybdate MoO4-- Chloride Cl-
15
If nitrification is slow and a crop takes up a substantial proportion of its N as ammonium, the crop will likely take up an excess of cations and the crop roots will respond by emitting H+. If uptake of ammonium occurs from subsoil layers, the crop will therefore tend to acidify those soil layers.
16
Recent data of soil pH and available N with depth.
17
March 2006 samples Location & Depth pHCaCl2 LBC NO3-N Lb/A NH4+-N 5.0
F31D 0-6 5.0 500 5 4.5 6 - 12 4.9 442 3.4 4.7 306 16 6.6 4.4 690 24 8.2 F31up 0-6 4.8 194 4 3.7 209 3.1 314 10 8.6 491 12 7.0
18
March 2006 samples pHCaCl2 LBC NO3-N NH4+-N Location & Depth Lb/A 4.8
317 4 3.7 6-12 4.7 296 3.8 12-24 4.9 230 8 10.3 24-36 4.6 528 18 8.1 36-48 512 22 7.0 H Sandy 0-6 5.0 155 3 2.9 111 3.5 86 6 8.6 96 12 10.0 4.2 330 13.5
19
We propose that relatively high levels of NH4+ at depth are not uncommon in S. Georgia soils and that an acid surface layer makes the problem worse because it slows the rate of nitrification, allowing N to remain as NH4+ for a longer time, increasing the probability that leaching rains will move NH4+ deeper into the soil.
21
Nitrate formed from ammonium at 25 to 30 C in different soils (Frederick and Broadbent Agr. Anh. NH3) Soil State pH ppm N/week Imperial clay California 8.0 308 Clermont sil Indiana 5.0 40 Clermont sil + 50 T lime 7.4 200 Leon fsand Florida 4.3 5.9 10
22
wheat Al & Mn Toxicity Mn & Fe Deficiency
24
Soil test manganese ratings
Soil test manganese, lb/acre Recommend manganese if soil pH is equal to or above 6.5 6.6 6.7 6.8
26
H+ ion 1.6 to 1.7 x10-5 Ångstrom From Wikipedia 1.20 Ångstrom
Similar presentations
© 2024 SlidePlayer.com. Inc.
All rights reserved.