Buy a subscription

Home Contact Sitemap login Checkout

Farming Smarter

Farming Smarter
  • Home
  • Who We Are
    • Who We Are
    • Staff Directory
    • Board of Directors
    • Contact Us
  • What We Do
    • What We Do
    • Agronomy Research
    • Commercial Innovation
    • Field Tested
    • Knowledge & Network
  • What We Offer
    • What We Offer
    • Sponsorship Packages
    • Events
    • Research Projects
      • Research Projects
      • Agronomy Research Projects
      • Field Tested Projects
      • Commercial Innovation Projects
    • Subscriptions
      • Subscriptions
      • FS Agronomy Subscription
      • FS Digital Subscription
    • Smart Partner Program
    • Speakers
  • Get Involved
    • Get Involved
    • Jobs
    • Sponsorship
    • I want to help!
    • With On-farm Research
    • With Product Testing
    • With Small Plot Research
    • Internship Opportunities
    • Volunteer!
    • Support Research!
  • Learning Resources
    • Learning Resources
    • Conservation Agronomy
    • Magazine
    • Online Classroom (CEU)
    • News Articles
    • Videos
    • Publications & Reports
      • Publications & Reports
      • Published Papers
      • Research Reports
    • Podcasts
    • 360 Videos
Print This Page

Soil Savvy - Phosphorus & Fungi

Monday, November 29, 2021

Phosphorus content in the natural soils is generally quite low.

The majority of the prairie soils are considered marginal to deficient in the plant-available phosphorus content required for crop production. Thus, farmers routinely apply phosphorus-containing fertilizers and manure to their fields to meet crop requirements.  

However, a significant fraction of the phosphorus applied to soils may convert to highly insoluble forms that are not available for plant uptake.

Soil phosphorus exists in three general chemical forms - organic phosphorus compounds, calcium-bound inorganic phosphorus compounds, and iron or aluminum bound inorganic phosphorus compounds.  

Of the inorganic forms, calcium-bound phosphorus compounds are generally predominant in the alkaline soils, while iron and aluminum compounds are predominant in the acidic soils. These inorganic compounds and organic phosphorus bound to the soil organic matter contribute to phosphorus dissolved in soil solution in the form of phosphate ions that plant roots take up.  

The symbiotic relationship between phosphate ions and mycorrhizal fungi assist the plant uptake.

The microscopic, thread-like hyphae of these fungi can extend into soils several centimeters from root surface and absorb phosphate ions from soil solution to translocate them to the roots. The amount of phosphorus available for plant uptake in the soil solution is very low, seldom exceeding 1/10,000 of the total phosphorus in soils.

We will look at the phenomenon controlling phosphorus solubility and mobilization in upcoming articles. 

To read more about Mycorrhizal fungi, Get Associated With Mycorrhizae!

Farming Smarter

211034 Hwy 512, Lethbridge County, AB
T1J 5N9 Canada

Quick Links

Who We Are

What We Do

What We Offer

Get Involved

Learning Resources

More

Staff Directory

Contact

Copyright © Farming Smarter 2023. All rights reserved | Privacy Policy | Terms & Conditions