4.7 Article

Comparative analysis of exchangeable aluminum in a tropical soil under long-term no-till cultivation

Journal

SOIL & TILLAGE RESEARCH
Volume 216, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

ELSEVIER
DOI: 10.1016/j.still.2021.105242

Keywords

Aluminum; Al-27-NMR; Back-titration; Chemical speciation; No-till; Soil amendments

Categories

Funding

  1. Sao Paulo Research Foundation (FAPESP) [2011/10566-6, 2013/18594-4, 2013/18694-9, 2013/02000-8, 2014/08768-8]
  2. Brazilian Na-tional Council for Scientific and Technological Development (CNPq)
  3. Natural Sciences and Engineering Research Council of Canada

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Aluminum toxicity is a crucial factor affecting crop yield in acid soils. Various techniques to measure exchangeable Al content in soil yield different results, with ICP-AES being the most accurate and efficient method. Application of dolomitic lime or calcium-magnesium silicate can effectively reduce exchangeable Al levels in the upper soil layers, and rotation crops can help improve soil Al availability.
Aluminum toxicity is a key determinant of crop yield for acid soils. Techniques used to characterize a soil's exchangeable Al content often yield discordant results, thus impeding the implementation of corrective measures. We critically compared three such techniques - back-titration, ICP-AES, and Al-27 NMR - for a tropical Oxisol under long-term (8-years) no-till cultivation involving four different cropping-systems and three pH control regimens. ICP-AES was superior in terms of accuracy, level of quantification (LOQ), practicable pH range, speed, cost, and versatility. By comparison, back-titration consistently overestimated exchangeable Al, whereas Al-27-NMR, though accurate, had a higher LOQ and is inherently non-quantitative between pH 5.4 and 6.3 owing to extreme quadrupolar broadening of Al(OH)(n)(H2O)(6-n)((3-n)) + (n = 1-3) signals. The only Al species detected by NMR in any of the soil extracts was the toxic Al hexaaqua cation, Al(H2O)(6)(3+), despite an appreciable presence of dissolved organic matter. Application of either dolomitic lime or calcium-magnesium silicate (CMS) as a pH corrective significantly decreased exchangeable Al in the upper soil layers. None of the decrease, however, was attributable to insoluble aluminosilicates having formed as a consequence of CMS dissolution. Rotation crops of wheat (T. aestivum) and showy rattlebox (C. spectabilis) depleted exchangeable Al in the upper soil layers, whereas palisade grass (Brachiaria brizantha) had no discernable effect on Al availability. Plots which incorporated any one of the three rotation crops provided equally high yields of soybean in year-8 when pH (1 M KCl) exceeded 4.9 +/- 0.2 and Al saturation was less than 25 +/- 5% (Al-ICP = 22 +/- 21 mg kg(-1)), on average, in the 0-20 cm soil horizon.

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