Considering soil potassium pools with dissimilar plant availability

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Abstract

Soil potassium (K) has traditionally been portrayed as residing in four functional pools: solution K, exchangeable K, interlayer (sometimes referred to as "fixed" or "nonexchangeable") K, and structural K in primary minerals. However, this four-pool model and associated terminology have created confusion in understanding the dynamics of K supply to plants and the fate of K returned to the soil in fertilizers, residues, or waste products. This chapter presents an alternative framework to depict soil K pools. The framework distinguishes between micas and feldspars as K-bearing primary minerals, based on the presence of K in interlayer positions or three-dimensional framework structures, respectively; identifies a pool of K in neoformed secondary minerals that can include fertilizer reaction products; and replaces the "exchangeable" K pool with a pool defined as "surface-adsorbed" K, identifying where the K is located and the mechanism by which it is held rather than identification based on particular soil testing procedures. In this chapter, we discuss these K pools and their behavior in relation to plant K acquisition and soil K dynamics.

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Bell, M. J., Ransom, M. D., Thompson, M. L., Hinsinger, P., Florence, A. M., Moody, P. W., & Guppy, C. N. (2020). Considering soil potassium pools with dissimilar plant availability. In Improving Potassium Recommendations for Agricultural Crops (pp. 163–190). Springer International Publishing. https://doi.org/10.1007/978-3-030-59197-7_7

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