Journal article
δ18O as a tracer of PO43- losses from agricultural landscapes
Journal of Environmental Management, Vol.317, 115299
01/09/2022
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Abstract
Accurately tracing the sources and fate of excess PO.sub.4.sup.3- in waterways is necessary for sustainable catchment management. The natural abundance isotopic composition of O in PO.sub.4.sup.3- ([delta].sup.18O.sub.P) is a promising tracer of point source pollution, but its ability to track diffuse agricultural pollution is unclear. We tested the hypothesis that [delta].sup.18O.sub.P could distinguish between agricultural PO.sub.4.sup.3- sources by measuring the integrated [delta].sup.18O.sub.P composition and P speciation of contrasting inorganic fertilisers (compound vs rock) and soil textures (sand, loam, clay) in southwestern Australia. [delta].sup.18O.sub.P composition differed between the three soil textures sampled across six livestock farms: sandy soils had lower overall [delta].sup.18O.sub.P values (21 [plus or minus] 10/00) than the loams (23 [plus or minus] 10/00), which corresponded with a smaller, but more readily leachable, PO.sub.4.sup.3- pool. Fertilisers had greater [delta].sup.18O.sub.P variability (~80/00), with fluctuations due to type and manufacturing year. Consequently, catchment 'agricultural soil leaching' [delta].sup.18O.sub.P signatures could span from 18 to 250/00 depending on both fertiliser type and timing (lag between application and leaching). These findings emphasise the potential of [delta].sup.18O.sub.P to untangle soil-fertiliser P dynamics under controlled conditions, but that its use to trace catchment-scale agricultural PO.sub.4.sup.3- losses is limited by uncertainties in soil biological P cycling and its associated isotopic fractionation.
Details
- Title
- δ18O as a tracer of PO43- losses from agricultural landscapes
- Creators
- Naomi S WellsDaren C GooddyMustefa Yasin ReshidPeter J WilliamsAndrew C SmithBradley D Eyre
- Publication Details
- Journal of Environmental Management, Vol.317, 115299
- Comment
- Iain Alexander and Natasha Carlson-Perret (Southern Cross University) assisted with soil P extractions. Robert Summers (Department of Primary Industries and Regional Development, Western Australia) supplied background site data, soil sampling equipment, and fertiliser samples. Fiona Valesini (Murdoch University) helped organise field work and secure research funding. Thanks to Justin Mercy (CSBP) for information on fertiliser sources and production, and to the six landowners for granting access to their properties.
- Publisher
- Elsevier B.V.
- Grant note
- Research was funded by Australian Research Council grant LP150100451 and by the UK’s Natural Environment Research Council Environmental Isotope Facility grant IP-1664-1116.
- Identifiers
- 991013032285602368
- Copyright
- © 2022 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.
- Academic Unit
- Faculty of Science and Engineering; Centre for Coastal Biogeochemistry; Science
- Language
- English
- Resource Type
- Journal article