A LITERATURE-REVIEW AND EVALUATION OF THE HEDLEY FRACTIONATION - APPLICATIONS TO THE BIOGEOCHEMICAL CYCLE OF SOIL-PHOSPHORUS IN NATURAL ECOSYSTEMS

被引:867
作者
CROSS, AF [1 ]
SCHLESINGER, WH [1 ]
机构
[1] DUKE UNIV, DEPT GEOL, DURHAM, NC 27708 USA
基金
美国国家航空航天局;
关键词
D O I
10.1016/0016-7061(94)00023-4
中图分类号
S15 [土壤学];
学科分类号
0903 ; 090301 ;
摘要
The Hedley fractionation recognizes plant-available forms (Resin Pi, Bicarb Pi, and Bicarb Po) and refractory forms (NaOH Pi, NaOH Po, Sonic Pi, Sonic Po, HCl Pi, Residual P) of soil phosphorus. This updated survey of the recent literature shows that the sequential fractionation proposed by Hedley et al. can also be used to separate forms of organically bound soil phosphorus from the geochemically bound fractions. We consider that biological P includes all the extracted organic fractions (Bicarb Po, NaOH Po, Sonic Po) and geochemical P includes the remaining fractions (Resin Pi, Bicarb Pi, NaOH Pi, Sonic Pi, HCl Pi) and the Po and Pi in the Residual fraction. Data from the Hedley fractionation suggest that the contribution of geochemical versus biological processes to soil phosphorus availability varies with pedogenesis. The pool of primary phosphate declines and the NaOH and sonicated-NaOH phosphorus fractions increase as phosphorus becomes geochemically fixed to the iron and aluminum oxides in more highly weathered soils. The sum of organic-P fractions - biological P - is an increasing proportion of total available P as a function of soil development. Therefore, the Hedley fractionation provides a valuable index of the relative importance of biological processes to soil phosphorus content across a soil weathering gradient.
引用
收藏
页码:197 / 214
页数:18
相关论文
共 76 条
[21]   CHANGES IN INORGANIC AND ORGANIC SOIL-PHOSPHORUS FRACTIONS INDUCED BY CULTIVATION PRACTICES AND BY LABORATORY INCUBATIONS [J].
HEDLEY, MJ ;
STEWART, JWB ;
CHAUHAN, BS .
SOIL SCIENCE SOCIETY OF AMERICA JOURNAL, 1982, 46 (05) :970-976
[22]   PLANT-INDUCED CHANGES IN THE RHIZOSPHERE OF RAPE (BRASSICA-NAPUS VAR - EMERALD) SEEDLINGS .3. CHANGES IN L VALUE, SOIL PHOSPHATE FRACTIONS AND PHOSPHATASE-ACTIVITY [J].
HEDLEY, MJ ;
WHITE, RE ;
NYE, PH .
NEW PHYTOLOGIST, 1982, 91 (01) :45-56
[23]  
Jackson M. L., 1958, Soil Chemical Analysis.
[24]  
Jenny H., 1980, The soil resource.
[25]  
Johnson D.W., 1980, ENVIRON INT, V3, P79, DOI DOI 10.1016/0160-4120(80)90040-9
[26]   THE ROLE OF CALCIUM-OXALATE IN THE AVAILABILITY OF PHOSPHORUS IN SOILS OF SEMIARID REGIONS - A THERMODYNAMIC STUDY [J].
JURINAK, JJ ;
DUDLEY, LM ;
ALLEN, MF ;
KNIGHT, WG .
SOIL SCIENCE, 1986, 142 (05) :255-261
[27]   THE BIOGEOCHEMISTRY OF PHOSPHORUS CYCLING AND PHOSPHORUS AVAILABILITY ALONG A DESERT SOIL CHRONOSEQUENCE [J].
LAJTHA, K ;
SCHLESINGER, WH .
ECOLOGY, 1988, 69 (01) :24-39
[28]   FACTORS AFFECTING PHOSPHATE SORPTION AND PHOSPHATE RETENTION IN A DESERT ECOSYSTEM [J].
LAJTHA, K ;
BLOOMER, SH .
SOIL SCIENCE, 1988, 146 (03) :160-167
[29]   SOIL-PHOSPHORUS FRACTIONS, ALUMINUM, AND WATER-RETENTION AS AFFECTED BY MICROBIAL ACTIVITY IN AN ULTISOL [J].
LEE, D ;
HAN, XG ;
JORDAN, CF .
PLANT AND SOIL, 1990, 121 (01) :125-136
[30]  
LEGG J. O., 1955, SOIL SCI SOC AMER PROC, V19, P139