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Potassium leaching from cut grassland and from urine patches
Authors:M. Kayser,,J. Mü  ller, &   J. Isselstein
Affiliation:Georg-August-University Göttingen, Research Centre for Animal Production and Technology, Driverstraße 22, 49377 Vechta, Germany;, University of Rostock, Institute of Land Use, Justus-vonLiebig-Weg 6, 18059 Rostock, Germany;, and Georg-August-University Göttingen, Institute of Grassland Science, Von-Siebold-Str. 8, 37075 Göttingen, Germany
Abstract:In grassland farming, especially on coarse‐textured soils, K can be a critical element. On these soils, the actual K management as well as fertilizer history to a large extent determine the leaching of K. The effects of four fertilizer regimes on the nutrient balances and leaching of K from grassland grown on a sandy soil were investigated. The swards differed in the source and level of N input and K fertilizer: no fertilizer N + 166 kg K ha?1 year?1 (Control), 320 kg inorganic N ha?1 + 300 kg K ha?1 year?1 (MIN 320), 320 kg N + 425 kg K ha?1 year?1 in form of cattle slurry (SLR 320) and a grass–clover sward + 166 kg K ha?1 year?1 (WCL 0) without any inorganic N input. In a second experimental phase, cores from these swards were used in a mini‐lysimeter study on the fate of K from urine patches. On cut grassland after 6 years K input minus removal in herbage resulted in average K surpluses per year of 47, 39, 56 and 159 kg K ha?1 for the Control, MIN 320, WCL 0 and SLR 320, respectively. Related leaching losses per year averaged 7.5, 5, 15 and 25 kg K ha?1. Losses of urinary‐K through leaching were 2.2–4.5 and 5.7–8.4% of the K supplied in summer and autumn applications, respectively. Plant and soil were the major sinks for K from fertilizer or urine. High levels of exchangeable K in the soil and/or large and late fertilizer or urine applications stimulated leaching of K.
Keywords:Grassland    potassium    leaching    urine patches
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