4.0 Article

The organic phosphorus composition of an Irish grassland soil

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ROYAL IRISH ACAD
DOI: 10.3318/BIOE.2008.108.1.17

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An understanding of the chemical nature of P in soil is essential to the sustainability of agriculture in Ireland. This study used (31)p nuclear magnetic resonance (NMR) spectroscopy and wet-chemical analysis to characterise NaOH-EDTA-extractable P in a grassland soil in south-east Ireland. Soil samples of 10cm depth were collected over five sampling days between September and December 2003. Total soil P (Pt) ranged between 723 and 819mg P kg(-1) soil, while Morgan's P (Pm) ranged between 3.4 and 12.5mg P l(-1) soil. Recovery rates of P extracted in the NaOH-EDTA solution were high, ranging from 75 to 88% of soil Pt. Four distinct classes of P compound were detected ill the P-31 NMR spectra: inorganic orthophosphate (delta = 6.72 to 6.85ppm, with a mean of 6.79ppm), orthophosphate monoesters (delta = 3.83 to 6.11ppm), orthophosphate diesters (delta = -0.32 to 0.54ppm) and pyrophosphates (delta = -3.44 to -3.13ppm, with a mean of -3.26ppm). Distinct signals at 5.64, 5.39, 5.02 and 4.55ppm in the spectra showed the dominance of myo-inositol hexakisphosphate in the orthophosphate monoester region. Orthophosphate diesters were subclassified as phospholipids (delta = 0 and 1.88ppm) and DNA (delta = 0.09 to -0.10ppm). Over the three-month sampling period the mean percentages of the four main P functional classes-inorgnic orthophosphate, orthophosphate monoesters, orthophosphate diesters and pyrophosphates-in the soil samples were approximately 52, 42, 3 and 3%, respectively. The ratio of orthophosphate monoesters to orthophosphate diesters ranged from 10 to 19. Further research is required to assess the potential bioavailability of organic P (Po) in Irish grassland soils in order to understand its role in the transfer of P from agricultural soil to our water bodies.

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