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Cadmium Levels in Soils and Plants From Some Long‐term Soil Fertility Experiments in the United States of America

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1987

Year

Abstract

Abstract Phosphate fertilizers contain varying amounts of Cd and other heavy metals as contaminants from phosphate rock (PR). To determine whether periodic applications of P fertilizers resulted in measurable accumulations of Cd in soils and in harvested crops, soil and plant tissue samples from nine long‐term (> 50 yr) soil fertility experiments in the USA were analyzed for Cd, as well as P and other elements. Annual Cd rates were estimated to range from 0.3 to 1.2 g ha −1 in these experiments. Plant tissues analyzed were corn ( Zea mays L.), soybean ( Glycine max L. Merr.), and wheat ( Triticum aestivum L.) leaves or grain, and timothy ( Phleum pratense L.) forage. Results from these long‐term experiments have shown that plant uptake of Cd contaminants in P fertilizers containing < 10 mg Cd kg −1 is negligible. While the Cd accumulations in soil in these experiments could not be calculated, they would approximate that accumulated in most agricultural soils in the USA at this time. About 70% of the P fertilizers is produced from Florida PR, which contains < 10 mg kg −1 of Cd, as compared with about 10% from the western USA, which contains higher Cd levels. Therefore, adding Cd to soils as a contaminant in P fertilizers at rates ranging from 0.3 to 1.2 g Cd ha −1 does not appear to result in increased Cd levels in plants as a result of long‐term P fertilization.