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Soil, land care and environmental research
RESEARCH ARTICLE

Mining disturbance alters phosphorus fractions in northern Australian soils

Terrence A. Short, Neal W. Menzies and David R. Mulligan

Australian Journal of Soil Research 38(2) 411 - 422
Published: 2000

Abstract

The brown kandosol soils at Weipa, North Queensland, contain little soil phosphorus (P). Plant-available fractions (considered in this study to include resin, hydroxide, and dilute acid extractable P) approximate 85 ˜g P/g, or 70% of total soil P, the majority of which is in labile organic forms, highlighting the importance of P cycling within the native eucalypt forest. A field experiment was undertaken to evaluate the effect of soil handling during bauxite mining on the distribution of P between the various soil fractions. This study showed that soil stripping and replacement disrupts the P cycle and affects the proportional distribution of P between soil fractions. Horizon mixing during soil handling severely reduces the size of plant-available soil P fractions in surface soils ( 0–5 cm depth) and this can only be partially compensated by the addition of fertiliser. A survey of rehabilitated sites of differing ages showed that restoration of soil organic P fractions is extremely slow, with the overall distribution of P within replaced soils remaining different from that within undisturbed soils 15 years after rehabilitation to native forest or exotic pasture species.

Keywords: soil phosphorus, phosphorus fractionation, mine disturbance, tropical soils.

https://doi.org/10.1071/SR99033

© CSIRO 2000

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