Abstract

The use of finely ground phosphate rocks (PRs) as directly applied P fertilizers in tropical farming systems is a cheaper alternative to acidulated, water-soluble P products. However, the effectiveness of PRs in tropical environments depends on the extent to which the required P uptake rate of the crop plant can be maintained by the rate of PR dissolution in that soil. That extent that this outcome is achieved depends on the properties of the PR, the soil, climate, plant factors, and on management practice. Environmental conditions in the surface layers of highly weathered soils in the humid tropics are generally conducive of the attainment of satisfactory rates of PR dissolution, especially as the reactivity of the PR increases. In soils with very high P sorption capacities, however, the agronomic effectiveness of PRs is reduced as the acquisition of dissolved P by plant roots is restricted by competition from P sorption processes in the soil.

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