Literature DB >> 26492192

Complex Forms of Soil Organic Phosphorus-A Major Component of Soil Phosphorus.

Timothy I McLaren1,2, Ronald J Smernik1, Mike J McLaughlin1,3, Therese M McBeath1,4, Jason K Kirby3, Richard J Simpson5, Christopher N Guppy2, Ashlea L Doolette1, Alan E Richardson5.   

Abstract

Phosphorus (P) is an essential element for life, an innate constituent of soil organic matter, and a major anthropogenic input to terrestrial ecosystems. The supply of P to living organisms is strongly dependent on the dynamics of soil organic P. However, fluxes of P through soil organic matter remain unclear because only a minority (typically <30%) of soil organic P has been identified as recognizable biomolecules of low molecular weight (e.g., inositol hexakisphosphates). Here, we use (31)P nuclear magnetic resonance spectroscopy to determine the speciation of organic P in soil extracts fractionated into two molecular weight ranges. Speciation of organic P in the high molecular weight fraction (>10 kDa) was markedly different to that of the low molecular weight fraction (<10 kDa). The former was dominated by a broad peak, which is consistent with P bound by phosphomonoester linkages of supra-/macro-molecular structures, whereas the latter contained all of the sharp peaks that were present in unfractionated extracts, along with some broad signal. Overall, phosphomonoesters in supra-/macro-molecular structures were found to account for the majority (61% to 73%) of soil organic P across the five diverse soils. These soil phosphomonoesters will need to be integrated within current models of the inorganic-organic P cycle of soil-plant terrestrial ecosystems.

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Year:  2015        PMID: 26492192     DOI: 10.1021/acs.est.5b02948

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Environ Sci Technol        ISSN: 0013-936X            Impact factor:   9.028


  6 in total

1.  Characterizing the phosphorus forms extracted from soil by the Mehlich III soil test.

Authors:  Barbara J Cade-Menun; Kyle R Elkin; Corey W Liu; Ray B Bryant; Peter J A Kleinman; Philip A Moore
Journal:  Geochem Trans       Date:  2018-02-21       Impact factor: 4.737

Review 2.  Opportunities for mobilizing recalcitrant phosphorus from agricultural soils: a review.

Authors:  Daniel Menezes-Blackburn; Courtney Giles; Tegan Darch; Timothy S George; Martin Blackwell; Marc Stutter; Charles Shand; David Lumsdon; Patricia Cooper; Renate Wendler; Lawrie Brown; Danilo S Almeida; Catherine Wearing; Hao Zhang; Philip M Haygarth
Journal:  Plant Soil       Date:  2017-08-01       Impact factor: 4.192

3.  Simulation of Phosphorus Chemistry, Uptake and Utilisation by Winter Wheat.

Authors:  Lianhai Wu; Martin Blackwell; Sarah Dunham; Javier Hernández-Allica; Steve P McGrath
Journal:  Plants (Basel)       Date:  2019-10-09

Review 4.  Handling the phosphorus paradox in agriculture and natural ecosystems: Scarcity, necessity, and burden of P.

Authors:  Peter Leinweber; Ulrich Bathmann; Uwe Buczko; Caroline Douhaire; Bettina Eichler-Löbermann; Emmanuel Frossard; Felix Ekardt; Helen Jarvie; Inga Krämer; Christian Kabbe; Bernd Lennartz; Per-Erik Mellander; Günther Nausch; Hisao Ohtake; Jens Tränckner
Journal:  Ambio       Date:  2018-01       Impact factor: 5.129

5.  Soil organic phosphorus transformations during 2000 years of paddy-rice and non-paddy management in the Yangtze River Delta, China.

Authors:  Xiaoqian Jiang; Wulf Amelung; Barbara J Cade-Menun; Roland Bol; Sabine Willbold; Zhihong Cao; Erwin Klumpp
Journal:  Sci Rep       Date:  2017-09-07       Impact factor: 4.379

6.  Methodology and validation of a new tandem mass spectrometer method for the quantification of inorganic and organic 18O-phosphate species.

Authors:  Aimée Schryer; Kris Bradshaw; Steven D Siciliano
Journal:  PLoS One       Date:  2020-02-24       Impact factor: 3.240

  6 in total

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