Publication | Open Access
A structural equation model analysis of phosphorus transformations in global unfertilized and uncultivated soils
108
Citations
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References
2016
Year
HydrogeologyBiogeochemistryEnvironmental ChemistryLabile PiEngineeringSoil PropertyEnvironmental EngineeringSoil PhosphorusSoil Organic MatterSoil ChemistrySoil FunctionPhosphorus TransformationsGeochemistryUncultivated SoilsEarth ScienceP Fractions
Abstract Understanding the soil phosphorus (P) cycle is a prerequisite for predicting how environmental changes may influence the dynamics and availability of P in soil. We compiled a database of P fractions sequentially extracted by the Hedley procedure and its modification in 626 unfertilized and uncultivated soils worldwide. With this database, we applied structural equation modeling to test hypothetical soil P transformation models and to quantify the importance of different soil P pools and P transformation pathways in shaping soil P availability at a global scale. Our models revealed that soluble inorganic P (Pi, a readily available P pool) was positively and directly influenced by labile Pi, labile organic P (Po), and primary mineral P and negatively and directly influenced by secondary mineral P; soluble Pi was not directly influenced by moderately labile Po or occluded P. The overall effect on soluble Pi was greatest for labile Pi followed by the organic P pools, occluded P, and then primary mineral P; the overall influence from secondary mineral P was small. Labile Pi was directly linked to all other soil P pools and was more strongly linked than soluble Pi to labile Po and primary mineral P. Our study highlights the important roles of labile Pi in mediating P transformations and in determining overall P availability in soils throughout the world.
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