Changes in soil potassium and environmental impacts in the Yangtze River
basin in China over the past 30 years
Abstract
The Yangtze River basin is distributed across subtropical monsoon
climate regions, and has four seasons, including a hot rainy season.
These climatic conditions provide favorable conditions for paddy-upland
rotation. This paper summarizes the spatiotemporal changes in soil
potassium (K) and K cycles in soil-plant systems, as well as
environmental impacts on K changes, and provides information for optimal
K management. During the past 30 years, soil available K increased by
-7.1% to 103.4%. The increase was lower in Hunan, Guizhou, Zhejiang,
and Jiangsu provinces (<10%) and higher in Anhui, Jiangxi,
Henan, and Chongqing provinces (>30%), demonstrating that
soil K pools were enhanced. Farm manure was gradually replaced by
synthetic K sources, such as straw and mineral fertilizers, which
contributed to an increase in crop yields and soil available K. The
meta-analysis results showed that comprehensive K management strategies
increased crop yield and soil available K by 11.0% and 44.3%,
respectively, on average. Other factors such as balanced fertilization,
recycling of straw, increase in atmospheric deposition, decrease in
leaching, runoff, and soil K fixation also greatly influenced soil K
changes, leading to improvements in crop yields, soil structure, soil
fertility, and nutrient availability. Positive K cycles and appropriate
K fertilizer use will facilitate proper K management, including cycling
of straw, improving machinery and equipment, and estimating the optimal
K fertilizer dose after straw. Future studies should focus on tradeoffs
between different forms of K under various environmental conditions and
accurate estimates of reductions in mineral-K fertilizer requirements
following straw return.