Evidence for the accumulation of toxic metal(loid)s in agricultural soils impacted from long-term application of phosphate fertilizer

Phosphate fertilizers may contain elevated concentrations of toxic metals and metalloids and therefore, their excessive application can result in the accumulation of both phosphorus (P) and metal(loid)s in agricultural soils. This study aims to investigate the occurrence, distribution, and potential...

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Veröffentlicht in:The Science of the total environment 2024-01, Vol.907, p.167863-167863, Article 167863
Hauptverfasser: Hu, Jun, Wang, Zhen, Williams, Gordon D.Z., Dwyer, Gary S., Gatiboni, Luke, Duckworth, Owen W., Vengosh, Avner
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Phosphate fertilizers may contain elevated concentrations of toxic metals and metalloids and therefore, their excessive application can result in the accumulation of both phosphorus (P) and metal(loid)s in agricultural soils. This study aims to investigate the occurrence, distribution, and potential plant-availability of metal(loid)s originating from phosphate fertilizer in a long-term experimental field at the Tidewater Research Station in North Carolina, where topsoil (10–20 cm deep) and subsoil (up to 150 cm deep) samples were collected from five plots with consistent and individually different application rates of P-fertilizer since 1966. We conducted systematic analyses of P and metal(loid)s in bulk soils, in the plant available fraction, and in four sequentially extracted soil fractions (exchangeable, reducible, oxidizable, and residual). The results show that P content in topsoils were directly associated with the rate of P-fertilizer application (ρ = 1, p  0.58, p  0.67, p 
ISSN:0048-9697
1879-1026
DOI:10.1016/j.scitotenv.2023.167863