Phosphorus (P) is an essential nutrient for sustaining life and agricultural production. Transformation of readily available P into forms that are unavailable to plants adds costs to P replenishment, which eventually translates into lower agronomic benefits and potential loss of soil P into
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Phosphorus (P) is an essential nutrient for sustaining life and agricultural production. Transformation of readily available P into forms that are unavailable to plants adds costs to P replenishment, which eventually translates into lower agronomic benefits and potential loss of soil P into runoff may degrade water quality. Therefore, understanding the sources and pathways of the formation of residual P pools in soils is useful information needed for the development of any technological or management efforts to minimize or inhibit the formation of such P pool and thus maximize availability to plants. In this research, we paired phosphate oxygen isotope ratios (δ
18O
P) with solid-state
31P NMR and quantitative XRD techniques along with general soil chemistry methods to identify the precipitation pathways of acid-extracted inorganic P (P
i) pools in an agricultural soil. Based on the comparison of isotope values of 0.5 mol L
−1 NaOH-P
i, 1 mol L
−1 HCl-P
i, and 10 mol L
−1 HNO
3-P
i pools and correlations of associated elements (Ca, Fe, and Al) in these pools, the HNO
3-P
i pool appears most likely to be transformed from the NaOH-P
i pool. A narrow range of isotope values of acid-P
i pools in shallow (tilling depth) and below (where physical mixing is absent) is intriguing but likely suggests leaching of particle-bound P in deeper soils. Overall, these findings provide an improved understanding of the sources, transport, and transformation of acid-P
i pools in agricultural soils and further insights into the buildup of legacy P in soils.
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