Spatiotemporal dynamics of soil phosphorus and crop uptake in global cropland during the 20th century
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2017-04-20
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Abstract
Phosphorus (P) plays a vital role in global crop production and food security. In this study, we investigate the changes in soil P pool inventories calibrated from historical countrywide crop P uptake, using a 0.5-by-0.5° spatially explicit model for the period 1900–2010. Globally, the total P pool per hectare increased rapidly between 1900 and 2010 in soils of Europe (+31 %), South America (+2 %), North America (+15 %), Asia (+17 %), and Oceania (+17 %), while it has been stable in Africa. Simulated crop P uptake is influenced by both soil properties (available P and the P retention potential) and crop characteristics (maximum uptake). Until 1950, P fertilizer application had a negligible influence on crop uptake, but recently it has become a driving factor for food production in industrialized countries and a number of transition countries like Brazil, Korea, and China. This comprehensive and spatially explicit model can be used to assess how long surplus P fertilization is needed or how long depletions of built-up surplus P can continue without affecting crop yield.
Keywords
agricultural land, agricultural modeling, crop production, crop yield, fertilizer application, food production, food security, nutrient uptake, phosphorus, soil nutrient, soil property, SDG 2 - Zero Hunger
Citation
Zhang, J, Beusen, A H W, van Apeldoorn, D F, Mogollón, J M, Yu, C & Bouwman, A F 2017, 'Spatiotemporal dynamics of soil phosphorus and crop uptake in global cropland during the 20th century', Biogeosciences, vol. 14, no. 8, pp. 2055-2068. https://doi.org/10.5194/bg-2016-543