Authors
Sheida Z Sattari, Alexander F Bouwman, Ken E Giller, Martin K van Ittersum
Publication date
2012/4/17
Journal
Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences
Volume
109
Issue
16
Pages
6348-6353
Publisher
National Academy of Sciences
Description
Phosphorus (P) is a finite and dwindling resource. Debate focuses on current production and use of phosphate rock rather than on the amounts of P required in the future to feed the world. We applied a two-pool soil P model to reproduce historical continental crop P uptake as a function of P inputs from fertilizer and manure and to estimate P requirements for crop production in 2050. The key feature is the consideration of the role of residual soil P in crop production. Model simulations closely fit historical P uptake for all continents. Cumulative inputs of P fertilizer and manure for the period 1965–2007 in Europe (1,115 kg⋅ha−1 of cropland) grossly exceeded the cumulative P uptake by crops (360 kg⋅ha−1). Since the 1980s in much of Europe, P application rates have been reduced, and uptake continues to increase due to the supply of plant-available P from residual soil P pool. We estimate that between 2008 and …
Total citations
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Scholar articles
SZ Sattari, AF Bouwman, KE Giller, MK van Ittersum - Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, 2012