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Effect of Low Zeolite Doses on Plants and Soil Physicochemical Properties

Thousands of tons of zeolitic materials are used yearly as soil conditioners and components of slow-release fertilizers. A positive influence of application of zeolites on plant growth has been frequently observed. Because zeolites have extremely large cation exchange capacity, surface area, porosit...

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Autores principales: Szatanik-Kloc, Alicja, Szerement, Justyna, Adamczuk, Agnieszka, Józefaciuk, Grzegorz
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: MDPI 2021
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8156034/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/34067914
http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/ma14102617
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author Szatanik-Kloc, Alicja
Szerement, Justyna
Adamczuk, Agnieszka
Józefaciuk, Grzegorz
author_facet Szatanik-Kloc, Alicja
Szerement, Justyna
Adamczuk, Agnieszka
Józefaciuk, Grzegorz
author_sort Szatanik-Kloc, Alicja
collection PubMed
description Thousands of tons of zeolitic materials are used yearly as soil conditioners and components of slow-release fertilizers. A positive influence of application of zeolites on plant growth has been frequently observed. Because zeolites have extremely large cation exchange capacity, surface area, porosity and water holding capacity, a paradigm has aroused that increasing plant growth is caused by a long-lasting improvement of soil physicochemical properties by zeolites. In the first year of our field experiment performed on a poor soil with zeolite rates from 1 to 8 t/ha and N fertilization, an increase in spring wheat yield was observed. Any effect on soil cation exchange capacity (CEC), surface area (S), pH-dependent surface charge (Qv), mesoporosity, water holding capacity and plant available water (PAW) was noted. This positive effect of zeolite on plants could be due to extra nutrients supplied by the mineral (primarily potassium—1 ton of the studied zeolite contained around 15 kg of exchangeable potassium). In the second year of the experiment (NPK treatment on previously zeolitized soil), the zeolite presence did not impact plant yield. No long-term effect of the zeolite on plants was observed in the third year after soil zeolitization, when, as in the first year, only N fertilization was applied. That there were no significant changes in the above-mentioned physicochemical properties of the field soil after the addition of zeolite was most likely due to high dilution of the mineral in the soil (8 t/ha zeolite is only ~0.35% of the soil mass in the root zone). To determine how much zeolite is needed to improve soil physicochemical properties, much higher zeolite rates than those applied in the field were studied in the laboratory. The latter studies showed that CEC and S increased proportionally to the zeolite percentage in the soil. The Qv of the zeolite was lower than that of the soil, so a decrease in soil variable charge was observed due to zeolite addition. Surprisingly, a slight increase in PAW, even at the largest zeolite dose (from 9.5% for the control soil to 13% for a mixture of 40 g zeolite and 100 g soil), was observed. It resulted from small alterations of the soil macrostructure: although the input of small zeolite pores was seen in pore size distributions, the larger pores responsible for the storage of PAW were almost not affected by the zeolite addition.
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spelling pubmed-81560342021-05-28 Effect of Low Zeolite Doses on Plants and Soil Physicochemical Properties Szatanik-Kloc, Alicja Szerement, Justyna Adamczuk, Agnieszka Józefaciuk, Grzegorz Materials (Basel) Article Thousands of tons of zeolitic materials are used yearly as soil conditioners and components of slow-release fertilizers. A positive influence of application of zeolites on plant growth has been frequently observed. Because zeolites have extremely large cation exchange capacity, surface area, porosity and water holding capacity, a paradigm has aroused that increasing plant growth is caused by a long-lasting improvement of soil physicochemical properties by zeolites. In the first year of our field experiment performed on a poor soil with zeolite rates from 1 to 8 t/ha and N fertilization, an increase in spring wheat yield was observed. Any effect on soil cation exchange capacity (CEC), surface area (S), pH-dependent surface charge (Qv), mesoporosity, water holding capacity and plant available water (PAW) was noted. This positive effect of zeolite on plants could be due to extra nutrients supplied by the mineral (primarily potassium—1 ton of the studied zeolite contained around 15 kg of exchangeable potassium). In the second year of the experiment (NPK treatment on previously zeolitized soil), the zeolite presence did not impact plant yield. No long-term effect of the zeolite on plants was observed in the third year after soil zeolitization, when, as in the first year, only N fertilization was applied. That there were no significant changes in the above-mentioned physicochemical properties of the field soil after the addition of zeolite was most likely due to high dilution of the mineral in the soil (8 t/ha zeolite is only ~0.35% of the soil mass in the root zone). To determine how much zeolite is needed to improve soil physicochemical properties, much higher zeolite rates than those applied in the field were studied in the laboratory. The latter studies showed that CEC and S increased proportionally to the zeolite percentage in the soil. The Qv of the zeolite was lower than that of the soil, so a decrease in soil variable charge was observed due to zeolite addition. Surprisingly, a slight increase in PAW, even at the largest zeolite dose (from 9.5% for the control soil to 13% for a mixture of 40 g zeolite and 100 g soil), was observed. It resulted from small alterations of the soil macrostructure: although the input of small zeolite pores was seen in pore size distributions, the larger pores responsible for the storage of PAW were almost not affected by the zeolite addition. MDPI 2021-05-17 /pmc/articles/PMC8156034/ /pubmed/34067914 http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/ma14102617 Text en © 2021 by the authors. https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/Licensee MDPI, Basel, Switzerland. This article is an open access article distributed under the terms and conditions of the Creative Commons Attribution (CC BY) license (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/).
spellingShingle Article
Szatanik-Kloc, Alicja
Szerement, Justyna
Adamczuk, Agnieszka
Józefaciuk, Grzegorz
Effect of Low Zeolite Doses on Plants and Soil Physicochemical Properties
title Effect of Low Zeolite Doses on Plants and Soil Physicochemical Properties
title_full Effect of Low Zeolite Doses on Plants and Soil Physicochemical Properties
title_fullStr Effect of Low Zeolite Doses on Plants and Soil Physicochemical Properties
title_full_unstemmed Effect of Low Zeolite Doses on Plants and Soil Physicochemical Properties
title_short Effect of Low Zeolite Doses on Plants and Soil Physicochemical Properties
title_sort effect of low zeolite doses on plants and soil physicochemical properties
topic Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8156034/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/34067914
http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/ma14102617
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