Revealing soil legacy phosphorus to promote sustainable agriculture in Brazil

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Revealing soil legacy phosphorus to promote sustainable agriculture in Brazil. / Pavinato, Paulo S.; Cherubin, Mauricio R.; Soltangheisi, Amin et al.
In: Scientific Reports, Vol. 10, No. 15615, 15615, 28.09.2020.

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Pavinato PS, Cherubin MR, Soltangheisi A, Rocha GC, Chadwick DR, Jones DL. Revealing soil legacy phosphorus to promote sustainable agriculture in Brazil. Scientific Reports. 2020 Sept 28;10(15615):15615. doi: 10.1038/s41598-020-72302-1

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Pavinato, Paulo S. ; Cherubin, Mauricio R. ; Soltangheisi, Amin et al. / Revealing soil legacy phosphorus to promote sustainable agriculture in Brazil. In: Scientific Reports. 2020 ; Vol. 10, No. 15615.

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - Revealing soil legacy phosphorus to promote sustainable agriculture in Brazil

AU - Pavinato, Paulo S.

AU - Cherubin, Mauricio R.

AU - Soltangheisi, Amin

AU - Rocha, Gustavo C.

AU - Chadwick, Dave R.

AU - Jones, Davey L.

PY - 2020/9/28

Y1 - 2020/9/28

N2 - Exploiting native soil phosphorus (P) and the large reservoirs of residual P accumulated over decades of cultivation, namely “legacy P”, has great potential to overcome the high demand of P fertilisers in Brazilian cropping systems. Long-term field experiments have shown that a large proportion (> 70%) of the surplus P added via fertilisers remains in the soil, mainly in forms not readily available to crops. An important issue is if the amount of legacy P mobilized from soil is sufficient for the crop nutritional demand and over how long this stored soil P can be effectively ‘mined’ by crops in a profitable way. Here we mapped the spatial–temporal distribution of legacy P over the past 50 years, and discussed possible agricultural practices that could increase soil legacy P usage by plants in Brazil. Mineral fertiliser and manure applications have resulted in ~ 33.4 Tg of legacy P accumulated in the agricultural soils from 1967 to 2016, with a current annual surplus rate of 1.6 Tg. Following this same rate, soil legacy P may reach up to 106.5 Tg by 2050. Agricultural management practices to enhance soil legacy P usage by crops includes increasing soil pH by liming, crop rotation, double-cropping, inter-season cover crops, no-tillage system and use of modern fertilisers, in addition to more efficient crop varieties and inoculation with P solubilising microorganisms. The adoption of these practices could increase the use efficiency of P, substantially reducing the new input of fertilisers and thus save up to 31.8 Tg of P fertiliser use (US$ 20.8 billion) in the coming decades. Therefore, exploring soil legacy P is imperative to reduce the demand for mineral fertilisers while promoting long-term P sustainability in Brazil.

AB - Exploiting native soil phosphorus (P) and the large reservoirs of residual P accumulated over decades of cultivation, namely “legacy P”, has great potential to overcome the high demand of P fertilisers in Brazilian cropping systems. Long-term field experiments have shown that a large proportion (> 70%) of the surplus P added via fertilisers remains in the soil, mainly in forms not readily available to crops. An important issue is if the amount of legacy P mobilized from soil is sufficient for the crop nutritional demand and over how long this stored soil P can be effectively ‘mined’ by crops in a profitable way. Here we mapped the spatial–temporal distribution of legacy P over the past 50 years, and discussed possible agricultural practices that could increase soil legacy P usage by plants in Brazil. Mineral fertiliser and manure applications have resulted in ~ 33.4 Tg of legacy P accumulated in the agricultural soils from 1967 to 2016, with a current annual surplus rate of 1.6 Tg. Following this same rate, soil legacy P may reach up to 106.5 Tg by 2050. Agricultural management practices to enhance soil legacy P usage by crops includes increasing soil pH by liming, crop rotation, double-cropping, inter-season cover crops, no-tillage system and use of modern fertilisers, in addition to more efficient crop varieties and inoculation with P solubilising microorganisms. The adoption of these practices could increase the use efficiency of P, substantially reducing the new input of fertilisers and thus save up to 31.8 Tg of P fertiliser use (US$ 20.8 billion) in the coming decades. Therefore, exploring soil legacy P is imperative to reduce the demand for mineral fertilisers while promoting long-term P sustainability in Brazil.

U2 - 10.1038/s41598-020-72302-1

DO - 10.1038/s41598-020-72302-1

M3 - Article

VL - 10

JO - Scientific Reports

JF - Scientific Reports

SN - 2045-2322

IS - 15615

M1 - 15615

ER -