Abstract
Phosphorus (P) use in excess of crop needs may impact surface water quality and contribute to eutrophication. However, P loss from agricultural land to water has never been estimated at the Canadian national scale. In this paper, the risk of P desorption from Canadian agricultural land is assessed by the source component of the indicator of risk of water contamination by P (IROWC‐P). The IROWC‐P source component (P_source) characterized the mobilization potential of soluble P and integrated four models of P desorption by water for dominant agricultural soil series of Canada on the soil landscape of Canada polygon scale (1:1,000,000). The objective of our study was to describe and evaluate a standardized method for deriving the P_source component. The P_source was assessed over 5‐yr intervals from 1981 to 2006 for scientifically based knowledge by relating annual P balance values, soil test P (STP) analyses, soil P saturation index, and Self‐Davis water extractable P extraction values. Results show trends of soil P enrichment for most Canadian provinces over the 25‐yr period but also an increased percentage of farmland classified above the water extractable soil P environmental threshold of 4 mg P kg −1 . The Canadian Prairies and Ontario showed small P_source values and almost no farmland above the environmental threshold. Quebec and the Atlantic Provinces had P_source values that exceeded the environmental threshold in 2006; more than 33% of farmland is classified above the environmental threshold value.
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CITATION STYLE
van Bochove, E., Thériault, G., Denault, J., Dechmi, F., Allaire, S. E., & Rousseau, A. N. (2012). Risk of Phosphorus Desorption from Canadian Agricultural Land: 25‐Year Temporal Trend. Journal of Environmental Quality, 41(5), 1402–1412. https://doi.org/10.2134/jeq2011.0307
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