Effect of Added Phosphorous and Organic Matter on the Availability of Phosphorous Fractions in Normal Soil under Field Capacity Moisture Tension

Mishra, Poornendra and Sharma, Sanjeev and Sachan, Ravindra and Singh, R. B. and Pyare, Ram and Ranjan, A. R. and Bhayankar, . (2023) Effect of Added Phosphorous and Organic Matter on the Availability of Phosphorous Fractions in Normal Soil under Field Capacity Moisture Tension. International Journal of Environment and Climate Change, 13 (10). pp. 638-643. ISSN 2581-8627

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Abstract

An Incubation study was conducted from January 2020 – May 2020 under "Laboratory conditions" at the Department of Soil Science and Agricultural Chemistry, Chandra Shekhar Azad Kanpur University of Agriculture and Technology, (U.P.) to study the “Effect of added phosphorous and organic matter on the availability of phosphorous fractions in normal soil under field capacity moisture tension”. To obtain a different fraction of phosphorus under the field capacity regime all three experiments were conducted under kankar soil conditions to determine Ca-P, Al-P and Fe-P as influenced by six different treatments. The results showed that with advancement in time of incubation, the availability of Ca-P (308.2 ppm and 235.3 ppm at 0 days and 90 days of incubation period, respectively), Al-P (89.5 ppm and 44.9 ppm at 0 days and 90 days of incubation period, respectively), while Fe-P (13.8 ppm and 13.1 ppm at 0 days and 90 days of incubation period, respectively) increased marginally at field capacity in kankar soil condition. Sunhemp (T2) proved more beneficial than FYM (T3) in increasing Fe-P, Al-P, and Ca-P as also Olsen’s P content in the soil. Therefore, the application of organic matter either in the form of sun hemp with phosphorus proved very useful in improving the avoidable content of the soil.

Item Type: Article
Subjects: ScienceOpen Library > Agricultural and Food Science
Depositing User: Managing Editor
Date Deposited: 13 Oct 2023 06:29
Last Modified: 14 Feb 2026 03:49
URI: http://journal.submanuscript.com/id/eprint/2233

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