Soil acidification and the importance of liming agricultural soils with particular reference to the United Kingdom
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Abstract
Abstract Soil acidification is caused by a number of factors including acidic precipitation and the deposition from the atmosphere of acidifying gases or particles, such as sulphur dioxide, ammonia and nitric acid. The most important causes of soil acidification on agricultural land, however, are the application of ammonium‐based fertilizers and urea, elemental S fertilizer and the growth of legumes. Acidification causes the loss of base cations, an increase in aluminium saturation and a decline in crop yields; severe acidification can cause nonreversible clay mineral dissolution and a reduction in cation exchange capacity, accompanied by structural deterioration. Soil acidity is ameliorated by applying lime…
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1Topics & keywords
Topics
Keywords
- Soil acidification
- Lime
- Soil pH
- Soil water
- Cation-exchange capacity
- Agronomy
- Environmental science
- Chemistry
UN Sustainable Development Goals
- Zero hunger
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