Correlating phosphorus extracted by simple soil extraction methods with foliar phosphorus concentrations of Picea abies (L.) H. Karst. and Fagus sylvatica (L.)

Hadi Manghabati, Michael Kohlpaintner, Rasmus Ettl, Karl Mellert, Uwe Blum, Axel Göttlein

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

18 Scopus citations

Abstract

Phosphorus (P) concentrations in needles and leaves of forest trees are declining in the last years in Europe. For a sustainable forest management the knowledge of site specific P nutrition/availability in forest soils is vital, but we are lacking verified simple methods for the estimation of plant available P. Within this study, four soil P extraction methods [water (PH2O), double-lactate (Plac), citric acid (Pcit), and sodium bicarbonate (PHCO3)], as well as total P content of the soil (Ptot) were tested to investigate which method is best correlated with foliar P concentrations of spruce [Picea abies (L.) H. Karst.] and beech [Fagus sylvatica (L.)]. Mineral soil samples from 5 depth levels of 48 forest sites of the Bavarian sample set of the second National Forest Soil Inventory (BZE II) were stratified according to tree species (spruce and beech) and soil pH (pH < 6.2 and > 6.2), covering the whole range of P nutrition. The extractable amount of P per mass unit of soil increased in the order PH2O << Plac < PHCO3) < Pcit, decreased with soil depth, and was higher in soils with pH < 6.2. Citric acid extracted up to 10% of Ptot in acidic soils. Whereas Pcit delivers adequate regression models for P nutrition in the case of spruce (R2 up to 0.53) and beech (R2 up to 0.58) for acidic soils, PHCO3 shows good results for spruce growing on acidic soils (R2 up to 0.66) and for beech on soils with pH > 6.2 (R2 up to 0.57). Plac produces adequate models only for beech on high pH soils (R2 up to 0.64), while PH2O did not produce acceptable regression models. Ptot seems suitable to explain the P nutrition status of beech on acidic (R2 up to 0.62) and alkaline soils (R2 up to 0.61). Highest R2s are obtained mostly in soil depths down to 40 cm. As PHCO3 and Pcit showed good results for both investigated tree species, they should be considered preferentially in future studies.

Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)547-556
Number of pages10
JournalJournal of Plant Nutrition and Soil Science
Volume181
Issue number4
DOIs
StatePublished - Aug 2018

Keywords

  • beech
  • citric acid
  • extraction
  • forest soil
  • phosphorus
  • sodium bicarbonate
  • spruce

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