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Data from: Experimental evidence that poor soil phosphorus (P) solubility typical of drylands due to calcium co-precipitation favors autonomous plant P acquisition over collaboration with mycorrhizal fungi

Metadata Updated: September 2, 2025

Dataset that accompanies a research paper entitled, "Experimental evidence that poor soil phosphorus (P) solubility typical of drylands due to calcium co-precipitation favors autonomous plant P acquisition over collaboration with mycorrhizal fungi" published in Soil Biology and Biochemistry September 28, 2024. Files include a readme file, bioassay datasets, and the respective R script for analyzing the individual data files.Results are relevant to arid and semiarid mixed-grass prairie ecosystems with calcareous and alkaline subsoils, especially sites with soils of Eapa loam soil series, frigid Aridic Argiustolls or Mollisols. The focal system was of northern mixed-grass prairie vegetation near Miles City, Montana which is in eastern Montana, USA (soil collection area: 46.304583, -105.978050, elevation 849 m). The study consisted of two pot experiments including: 1) calcium carbonate addition and incubation experiment and 2) calcium carbonate addition and arbuscular mycorrhizal inoculant experiment. The experiments were designed to improve understanding effects of calcium carbonate on soil pH and available phosphorus (via. co-precipitation of calcium and phosphorus) in the absence of plants and mycorrhizal fungi (#1). The other experiment utilized eight plant species, calcium carbonate additions, and mycorrhizal inoculant to discern modes of phosphorus acquisition by plants (i.e. root P mining versus mycorrhizal collaboration; #2) over a soluble phosphorus gradient. Pot experiments utilized completely randomized designs. #1 was a single factor experiment with four calcium carbonate addition levels. #2 was a three factor experiment with eight plant species, four calcium carbonate levels, and a mycorrhizal inoculant treatment. Data include soil pH, soil nutrients, shoot phosphorus, shoot manganese, mycorrhizal responsiveness (i.e. Cohen's D), total plant biomass, shoot biomass, and root mass ratio.Additional details can be found in the readme file, manuscript, and manuscript's supplement.

Access & Use Information

Public: This dataset is intended for public access and use. License: Creative Commons CCZero

Downloads & Resources

Dates

Metadata Created Date January 31, 2025
Metadata Updated Date September 2, 2025
Data Update Frequency irregular

Metadata Source

Harvested from USDA JSON

Additional Metadata

Resource Type Dataset
Metadata Created Date January 31, 2025
Metadata Updated Date September 2, 2025
Publisher Agricultural Research Service
Maintainer
Identifier 10.15482/USDA.ADC/28195697.v1
Data Last Modified 2025-08-27
Public Access Level public
Data Update Frequency irregular
Bureau Code 005:18
Metadata Context https://project-open-data.cio.gov/v1.1/schema/catalog.jsonld
Schema Version https://project-open-data.cio.gov/v1.1/schema
Catalog Describedby https://project-open-data.cio.gov/v1.1/schema/catalog.json
Harvest Object Id 32f38f7d-eee4-4f8f-827a-8a7033aff69d
Harvest Source Id d3fafa34-0cb9-48f1-ab1d-5b5fdc783806
Harvest Source Title USDA JSON
License https://creativecommons.org/publicdomain/zero/1.0/
Old Spatial {"type": "Point", "coordinates": -105.97805, 46.304583}
Program Code 005:031, 005:040
Source Datajson Identifier True
Source Hash 1942278f76185a1324eb6e3e3df654c824067917c1b473fb7cb08df5eae245f2
Source Schema Version 1.1
Spatial {"type": "Point", "coordinates": -105.97805, 46.304583}
Temporal 2021-11-01/2022-04-22

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