Abstract

SummaryThis study attempts to clarify the advantages and shortcomings of various laboratory tests that are used to characterize the status and dynamics of soil phosphorus (P). We analysed a set of soil samples differing in P status for inorganic P fractions, water‐soluble P (Pw60) and bicarbonate‐extractable P (POlsen) both before and after a pot experiment in which soil was depleted. Their P exchange characteristics were determined by Q/I plots, fitted by a modified Langmuir equation, and the supplying power was further assessed by extracting soil samples with various amounts of water. The sensitivity of the P tests in assessing the decrease in inorganic reserves of P was expressed using a response index that was defined as the ratio between the decrease in inorganic P and the decrease in soil P test value. For POlsen, the index ranged from 6 to 11 and for Pw60 from 10 to 26. Desorption curves obtained by extracting soil samples with different amounts of water indicate increased buffering power and that large reserves of P were released from soil in weak solutions (P < 0.030 mg l−1) around soil particles. Although the constants of the Langmuir equation responded reasonably well to the changes in reserves of P in the soil, the results suggest caution is needed in the quantitative interpretation of the constant Q0 (instantly labile P) of the Langmuir equation.

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