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Advanced approach for screening soil with a low radiocesium transfer to brown rice in Fukushima based on exchangeable and nonexchangeable potassium. | LitMetric

AI Article Synopsis

  • Phytoavailable potassium (K) in soil influences how much radiocesium transfers from soil to brown rice, especially in paddy fields in Fukushima, Japan.
  • The study measured exchangeable and nonexchangeable K in soil samples before and after rice harvest in 2017 and 2018, finding that exchangeable K decreased significantly after harvest and negatively correlated with radiocesium transfer factors.
  • Results showed that while low levels of exchangeable K generally increased transfer factors, certain soils with high nonexchangeable K (above 50 mg KO per 100 g) still exhibited low radiocesium transfer, suggesting both K types are important for understanding and managing radiocesium levels in rice.

Article Abstract

Phytoavailable K in soil is a key to control the transfer factor of radiocesium from soil to brown rice. The transfer factors were determined for paddy fields cultivated in 2017 and 2018 under different K fertilization regimes in Fukushima Prefecture, Japan. Two phytoavailable forms of K, the exchangeable and nonexchangeable K contents were investigated for the surface soil sampled after the transplanting and fertilization as well as after harvest of rice in the same paddy fields. The exchangeable K content largely decreased from after transplanting and fertilization to after harvest, and the exchangeable K of the soil after harvest was negatively correlated with the transfer factor (r = -0.70, p < .001). Most soil samples after harvest showed that the transfer factors exponentially increased as the exchangeable K decreased; however, some of the samples indicated considerably low transfer factors (<0.005) despite being exchangeable K deficient, i.e., exchangeable K < 25 mg KO 100 g. Even though this value before usual fertilization has been effectively used as a threshold to determine whether supplemental K fertilization is required to reduce the radiocesium content in brown rice, additional screening was needed to estimate this radiocesium transfer more precisely. Thus, we found that not only the exchangeable K but also nonexchangeable K contents had a negative correlation with the transfer factor (r = -0.60, p < .001) of the soil samples after harvest but were not correlated with each other (r = -0.10). Furthermore, the results revealed that soil with nonexchangeable K > 50 mg KO 100 g indicated a considerably low transfer factor, even if exchangeable K deficient. Thus, via our field-scale experiments, we concluded that the criterion nonexchangeable K > 50 mg KO 100 g can be used as another threshold for use along with that of exchangeable K to differentiate soil with a low radiocesium transfer rate from exchangeable K deficient soil.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.scitotenv.2020.140458DOI Listing

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