4.5 Article

Behaviour of nutrients released from crystalline minerals of artificial potassium silicate fertilizer and their supply to the Japanese mustard spinach (Brassica rapa var. perviridis)

Journal

SOIL USE AND MANAGEMENT
Volume 38, Issue 3, Pages 1403-1415

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1111/sum.12789

Keywords

akermanite; kalsilite; mineral composition; nutrient-use efficiency; potassium-magnesium silicate

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This study quantitatively investigated the release behavior of nutrients from artificial potassium silicate fertilizer (PSF) and found that potassium in PSF is rapidly released and readily available to plants. The most abundant crystalline minerals in PSF were kalsilite, akermanite, and potassium-magnesium silicate.
Artificial potassium silicate fertilizer (PSF) is a typical slow-release potassium fertilizer. However, the exact minerals that are released by PSF and the nutrients that are made available to plants remain unclear. This study quantitatively investigated the behaviour of nutrients released from PSF by the batch-release test and their supply to plants by the plant growth tests, respectively, to determine the quantitative relationship between nutrients released from PSF and taken up by the plant. X-ray diffraction (XRD) analysis showed that kalsilite, akermanite, and potassium-magnesium silicate were the most abundant crystalline minerals in PSF. The XRD peaks of akermanite and potassium-magnesium silicate were absent after citric acid extraction at a liquid/solid ratio of 20 to 100 (CA20 and CA100). Magnesium-use efficiencies in PSF (11%) and residue treatments after ammonium acetate extraction (AC, 10%) were higher than those in residue treatments after CA20 (1.8%) and CA100 (6.0%). Potassium (%) released by AC in the batch-release test (4.5%) was compatible with the difference of potassium-use efficiencies between the treatments of PSF (21%) and the AC-residue (16%). Likewise, potassium (%) released by CA20 (8.8%) was lower than the difference of potassium-use efficiencies between the treatments of PSF (21%) and CA20-residue (7.9%). This study suggests that potassium is rapidly released from potassium-magnesium silicate in PSF and is readily available to plants.

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