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Complex Forms of Soil Organic Phosphorus–A Major Component of Soil Phosphorus
136
Citations
35
References
2015
Year
EngineeringSoil Organic MatterMolecular BiologySoil BiochemistryOrganic GeochemistryEnvironmental ChemistryLow Molecular WeightMicrobial EcologyBiogeochemistryBiochemistrySoil Organic PSolution Nmr SpectroscopyComplex FormsSoil EcologyEnvironmental EngineeringSoil PhosphorusNatural SciencesSoil ChemistryMolecular Weight
Phosphorus (P) is an essential element for life, an innate constituent of soil organic matter, and a major anthropogenic input to terrestrial ecosystems. The supply of P to living organisms is strongly dependent on the dynamics of soil organic P. However, fluxes of P through soil organic matter remain unclear because only a minority (typically <30%) of soil organic P has been identified as recognizable biomolecules of low molecular weight (e.g., inositol hexakisphosphates). Here, we use (31)P nuclear magnetic resonance spectroscopy to determine the speciation of organic P in soil extracts fractionated into two molecular weight ranges. Speciation of organic P in the high molecular weight fraction (>10 kDa) was markedly different to that of the low molecular weight fraction (<10 kDa). The former was dominated by a broad peak, which is consistent with P bound by phosphomonoester linkages of supra-/macro-molecular structures, whereas the latter contained all of the sharp peaks that were present in unfractionated extracts, along with some broad signal. Overall, phosphomonoesters in supra-/macro-molecular structures were found to account for the majority (61% to 73%) of soil organic P across the five diverse soils. These soil phosphomonoesters will need to be integrated within current models of the inorganic-organic P cycle of soil-plant terrestrial ecosystems.
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