title: Phosphorus Management on ‘Extensive' Organic Farms with Infertile Soils creator: Cornish, P. S. subject: Nutrient turnover subject: Farm nutrient management description: Two case-study farms with negative P balances maintained acceptable productivity without fertilisers, apparently by ‘mining’ ‘available’ P reserves in surface and subsoil. The question for these organic farms is ‘how long before fertiliser is needed?’ With six farms on lower-fertility, weakly acidic to alkaline soils and modest rainfall (380-580 mm/yr), low productivity was related to P deficiency despite positive P balances from using allowable fertilisers. Useful supplies of compost or manure were unavailable. Until effective allowable fertilisers or microbial inoculants have been developed, there is a case for using soluble forms of P fertiliser on soils where soil-solution P is low and soil P-sorption is high, so that additions of soluble P ‘feed the soil, not the plant’. date: 2007 type: Conference paper, poster, etc. type: NonPeerReviewed format: application/pdf identifier: http://orgprints.org/9905/1/Cornish-2007-phosphorus_management.pdf identifier: Cornish, P. S. (2007) Phosphorus Management on ‘Extensive' Organic Farms with Infertile Soils. 3rd QLIF Congress: Improving Sustainability in Organic and Low Input Food Production Systems, University of Hohenheim, Germany, March 20-23, 2007. relation: http://orgprints.org/9905/