Abstract

AbstractKnife applications of NH+4‐N and P fertilizers into common injection zones (dual N and P) have produced higher crop yields and P absorption than other N and P application methods. Enhanced solubility of the P fertilizer reaction products due to the presence of NH+4 could account, in part, for these crop responses. Greenhouse studies were conducted to characterize P reaction product solubility transformations and P availability in dual N and P injection zones. Treatments were ammonium polyphosphate (APP) + NH4OH (used to simulate anhydrous ammonia), NH4OH or KNO3 + nitrapyrin solutions injected simultaneously (dual N and P application) into four different soils (Aridic Argiustolls, Udic Argiustolls, Mollic Albaqualfs, and Typic Argiborolls). Monocalcium phosphate potentials and NaHCO3 or Bray extractable P were used to characterize P solubility and availability relationships in the injection zones. Dual application of NH4OH plus APP with and without nitrapyrin resulted in increased NaHCO3 or Bray‐extractable P in three of the four soils. The mechanisms that resulted in higher extractable P are concluded to be associated with the high injection zone pH caused by NH4OH applications. The postulated mechanisms are: (i) the initial high (alkaline) pH immediately after dual application allows formation of highly available Ca‐P reaction products as opposed to less available Al‐ and Fe‐P reaction products that exist in slightly acid soils, (ii) then the production of H+ during nitrification increases P solubility as phosphate potentials move up the dicalcium phosphate dihydrate and dicalcium phosphate isotherms, and (iii) this rapidly decreasing pH allows the soluble reaction products to persist which results in higher P availability and solubility for a longer period of time. Inclusion of nitrapyrin (a nitrification inhibitor) prolonged the time of Ca‐P reaction product persistence in the injection zone. Dual KNO3 + APP applications resulted in suppressed P availability, as compared to NH4OH + APP, apparently due to formation of less soluble reaction products. This suppressed P availability could account for the relative ineffectiveness of NO‐3 ‐N in dual application.

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