Research Papers

Impact of long-term pig slurry application on phosphorus fractions in profiles of contrasting soils in KwaZulu-Natal, South Africa

DOI: 10.1080/02571862.2025.2537724
Author(s): Sbonakaliso Msizeni Zwane University of KwaZulu-Natal, South Africa, Pardon Muchaonyerwa University of KwaZulu-Natal, South Africa,

Abstract

Long-term applications of pig slurry (PS) can lead to phosphorus (P) accumulation in soil, but its distribution across soil profiles remains poorly studied, particularly after 50 years of PS application on pasture soils, compared to undisturbed and cropped Luvisols, and across different durations on Ferralsols under maize-soybean rotations in KwaZulu-Natal, South Africa. Estimated annual P additions through PS were 147β€…β€…kg P haβˆ’1 in Luvisol and 58.8β€…β€…kg P haβˆ’1 in Ferralsol, plus 30β€…β€…kg haβˆ’1 from mineral fertiliser. Soil samples from multiple depths were analysed for total P, available P, and other P fractions. Total P increased to 2 824 and 3 415β€…β€…mg kgβˆ’1 in Luvisol and Ferralsol, respectively. Available P reached 101 (Luvisol) and 112β€…β€…mg kgβˆ’1 (Ferralsol) in the top 400β€…β€…mm of soil. Organic P also increased, reaching 2 597β€…β€…mg kgβˆ’1 (Ferralsol) and 1 891β€…β€…mg kgβˆ’1 (Luvisol). In both soils, Fe-P (355 and 491β€…β€…mg kgβˆ’1) and Al-P (255 and 239β€…β€…mg kgβˆ’1) increased after over 20 years of PS application. In Luvisol, Al-P accumulation (255β€…β€…mg kgβˆ’1) was confined to the top 100β€…β€…mm, while in Ferralsol it extended to 400β€…β€…mm. This indicates a low risk of leaching but a high risk of surface water pollution through runoff and erosion. The study underscores the importance of monitoring the effects of PS application to mitigation environmental risks while maintaining soil fertility.

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