Data from: Soil phosphorus drawdown by perennial bioenergy cropping systems in the Midwestern US
Without fertilization, harvest of perennial bioenergy cropping systems diminishes soil nutrient stocks, yet the time course of nutrient drawdown has not often been investigated. We analyzed phosphorus (P) inputs (fertilization and atmospheric deposition) and outputs (harvest and leaching losses) ove...
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Zusammenfassung: | Without fertilization, harvest of perennial bioenergy cropping systems
diminishes soil nutrient stocks, yet the time course of nutrient drawdown
has not often been investigated. We analyzed phosphorus (P) inputs
(fertilization and atmospheric deposition) and outputs (harvest and
leaching losses) over seven years in three representative biomass
crops—switchgrass (Panicum virgatum L.), miscanthus (Miscanthus X
giganteus) and hybrid poplar trees (Populus nigra X P. maximowiczii) – as
well as in no-till corn (maize; Zea mays L.) for comparison, all planted
on former cropland in SW Michigan, USA. Only corn received P fertilizer.
Corn (grain and stover), switchgrass, and miscanthus were harvested
annually, while poplar was harvested after six years. Soil test P (STP;
Bray-1 method) was measured in the upper 25 cm of soil annually. Harvest P
removal was calculated from tissue P concentration and harvest yield (or
annual woody biomass accrual in poplar). Leaching was estimated as total
dissolved P concentration in soil solutions sampled beneath the rooting
depth (1.25 m), combined with hydrological modeling. Fertilization and
harvest were by far the dominant P budget terms for corn, and harvest P
removal dominated the P budgets in switchgrass, miscanthus, and poplar,
while atmospheric deposition and leaching losses were comparatively
insignificant. Because of significant P removal by harvest, the P balances
of switchgrass, miscanthus, and poplar were negative and corresponded with
decreasing STP, whereas P fertilization compensated for the harvest P
removal in corn, resulting in a positive P balance. Results indicate that
perennial crop harvest without P fertilization removed legacy P from
soils, and continued harvest will soon draw P down to limiting levels,
even in soils once heavily P-fertilized. Widespread cultivation of
bioenergy crops may therefore alter P balances in agricultural landscapes,
eventually requiring P fertilization, which could be supplied by P
recovery from harvested biomass. |
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DOI: | 10.5061/dryad.dfn2z355r |