Soil Chemistry Aspects of Predicting Future Phosphorus Requirements in Sub-Saharan Africa
Publication date
2019-01
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Abstract
Phosphorus (P) is a finite resource and critical to plant growth and therefore food security. Regional- and continental-scale studies propose how much P would be required to feed the world by 2050. These indicate that Sub-Saharan Africa soils have the highest soil P deficit globally. However, the spatial heterogeneity of the P deficit caused by heterogeneous soil chemistry in the continental scale has never been addressed. We provide a combination of a broadly adopted P-sorption model that is integrated into a highly influential, large-scale soil phosphorus cycling model. As a result, we show significant differences between the model outputs in both the soil-P concentrations and total P required to produce future crops for the same predicted scenarios. These results indicate the importance of soil chemistry for soil-nutrient modeling and highlight that previous influential studies may have overestimated P required. This is particularly the case in Somalia where conventional modeling predicts twice as much P required to 2050 as our new proposed model.
Keywords
phosphorus, soil, Sub-Saharan Africa, Global and Planetary Change, Environmental Chemistry, General Earth and Planetary Sciences, SDG 2 - Zero Hunger
Citation
Magnone, D, Niasar, V J, Bouwman, A F, Beusen, A H W, van der Zee, S E A T M & Sattari, S Z 2019, 'Soil Chemistry Aspects of Predicting Future Phosphorus Requirements in Sub-Saharan Africa', Journal of Advances in Modeling Earth Systems, vol. 11, no. 1, pp. 327-337. https://doi.org/10.1029/2018MS001367