Estimation of phosphorus bioavailability from composted organic wastes

Sewage sludge derived from municipal sewage treatment plants is an important source of macronutrients, micronutrients and organic matter. For this reason composting of sewage sludge, along with combustion and co-combustion, is a new management priority in Poland. In this study six composts of differ...

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Main Author: Monika Jakubus
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Taylor & Francis Group 2016-10-01
Series:Chemical Speciation & Bioavailability
Subjects:
Online Access:http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/09542299.2016.1227687
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spelling doaj-a54acd2c26974e69bb51db1305f223cf2020-11-25T02:05:55ZengTaylor & Francis GroupChemical Speciation & Bioavailability0954-22992047-65232016-10-01281-418919810.1080/09542299.2016.12276871227687Estimation of phosphorus bioavailability from composted organic wastesMonika Jakubus0Poznań University of Life SciencesSewage sludge derived from municipal sewage treatment plants is an important source of macronutrients, micronutrients and organic matter. For this reason composting of sewage sludge, along with combustion and co-combustion, is a new management priority in Poland. In this study six composts of different origin and composition were evaluated in terms of their abundance in phosphorus, because it is an essential nutrient for all living organisms. Analyses were conducted on the samples at the initial and at the maturation phase of composting. The bioavailability of phosphorus was estimated on the basis of amounts of the nutrient in isolated fractions using the sequential extraction method. First of all quantitative changes of the total nutrient content and its amounts in separated fractions were dependent on the mixture composition. Irrespective of compost type, 34.5–75.0% of the total amounts of phosphorus were found in hardly available combinations (Fr. III), while available phosphorus forms (Fr. I) accounted for only 6.6–21.6%. As a result of composting together different organic wastes an increase was observed both in the total content and the amounts of this nutrient in separated fractions. This phenomenon was observed particularly in composts with smaller levels of sewage sludge (30–40%), characterised by rapid organic matter decomposition, which was indicated by higher bioavailable amounts of phosphorus. Under such conditions the content of P ranged between 3.68 and 7.4 g kg−1. In comparison to the labile pool of P obtained for matured composts C5 and C6 (65 and 75% of sewage sludge in their composition) amounting to 2.45–3.0 g kg−1 the above values were considerable. Bioavailable phosphorus contents potentially introduced to soil with composts doses calculated at 170 kg total N/ha/yr ranged from 69.8 to 80.2 kg for compost with the lowest share of sewage sludge and from 11.2 to 20.7 kg for compost with the highest share of sewage sludge.http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/09542299.2016.1227687Organic wastessequential extraction of phosphorusbioavailabilitysoil loadcompostgermination index
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Monika Jakubus
spellingShingle Monika Jakubus
Estimation of phosphorus bioavailability from composted organic wastes
Chemical Speciation & Bioavailability
Organic wastes
sequential extraction of phosphorus
bioavailability
soil load
compost
germination index
author_facet Monika Jakubus
author_sort Monika Jakubus
title Estimation of phosphorus bioavailability from composted organic wastes
title_short Estimation of phosphorus bioavailability from composted organic wastes
title_full Estimation of phosphorus bioavailability from composted organic wastes
title_fullStr Estimation of phosphorus bioavailability from composted organic wastes
title_full_unstemmed Estimation of phosphorus bioavailability from composted organic wastes
title_sort estimation of phosphorus bioavailability from composted organic wastes
publisher Taylor & Francis Group
series Chemical Speciation & Bioavailability
issn 0954-2299
2047-6523
publishDate 2016-10-01
description Sewage sludge derived from municipal sewage treatment plants is an important source of macronutrients, micronutrients and organic matter. For this reason composting of sewage sludge, along with combustion and co-combustion, is a new management priority in Poland. In this study six composts of different origin and composition were evaluated in terms of their abundance in phosphorus, because it is an essential nutrient for all living organisms. Analyses were conducted on the samples at the initial and at the maturation phase of composting. The bioavailability of phosphorus was estimated on the basis of amounts of the nutrient in isolated fractions using the sequential extraction method. First of all quantitative changes of the total nutrient content and its amounts in separated fractions were dependent on the mixture composition. Irrespective of compost type, 34.5–75.0% of the total amounts of phosphorus were found in hardly available combinations (Fr. III), while available phosphorus forms (Fr. I) accounted for only 6.6–21.6%. As a result of composting together different organic wastes an increase was observed both in the total content and the amounts of this nutrient in separated fractions. This phenomenon was observed particularly in composts with smaller levels of sewage sludge (30–40%), characterised by rapid organic matter decomposition, which was indicated by higher bioavailable amounts of phosphorus. Under such conditions the content of P ranged between 3.68 and 7.4 g kg−1. In comparison to the labile pool of P obtained for matured composts C5 and C6 (65 and 75% of sewage sludge in their composition) amounting to 2.45–3.0 g kg−1 the above values were considerable. Bioavailable phosphorus contents potentially introduced to soil with composts doses calculated at 170 kg total N/ha/yr ranged from 69.8 to 80.2 kg for compost with the lowest share of sewage sludge and from 11.2 to 20.7 kg for compost with the highest share of sewage sludge.
topic Organic wastes
sequential extraction of phosphorus
bioavailability
soil load
compost
germination index
url http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/09542299.2016.1227687
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