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Effect of long-term fertilization on soil agrochemical properties

Content Author: LAMMC

The effect of Long-Term Fertilization on Soil Agrochemical Properties has been studied in a strila started in 1971 In both 1971 and 2021, the application of mineral NPK fertilizers increased the yields of winter wheat, spring barley, sugar beet, and other crops by 21.5-47.0 GJ ha?¹. The average annual nitrate leaching without N fertilization was 68 kg ha?¹, while an N216 rate increased N loss to 299 kg ha?¹. When N216 was applied without K and P fertilization, N loss increased to 510 kg ha?¹. After 50 years, a P50 fertilization rate did not change the concentration of soil mobile P2O5, while a P95 rate increased P2O5 content by 324 kg ha?¹, and a P180 rate increased it by up to 529 kg ha?¹. On loamy soil, even at the highest fertilizer rates, soil phosphate (PO4) leached down to a depth of 40 cm, amounting to 4.2-4.9 kg ha?¹, while potassium ion (K?) loss was up to 6.8-8.0 kg ha?¹. At optimum fertilization rates, the leaching was only one-third of these amounts. For soils with moderate concentrations of mobile P and K, the optimum rate of fertilizers in crop rotation is N 108, P 64, K 96.

Funded by the European Union and UK Research and Innovation (UKRI). Views and opinions expressed are however those of the author(s) only and do not necessarily reflect those of the European Union, European Commission or UKRI. Neither the European Union, European Commission nor UKRI can be held responsible for them.

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