Soil Potassium

AUS-TSR-LVG-SOK General Moderate confidence

Benchmark Value

280 mg/kg
Direction: Higher is desirable ↑
Form: MaximumOnly

Scoring Curve

Scoring curve unavailable

The scoring engine could not generate a curve for this benchmark context. The primary form is CompositeFramework, but the benchmark data may be missing required fields (e.g., optimal range bounds for an OptimalRange benchmark). This is typically a data quality issue in the benchmark pipeline.

Evidence & Context

Soil levels exceeding approximately 280-300 mg/kg can lead to 'luxury consumption' of potassium by forage, inducing metabolic disorders (e.g., grass tetany) in livestock, which signifies a critical failure in agroecosystem health.

Metric Definition:

Colwell K soil test measurement of plant-available potassium in soil.

Benchmark Definition:

This benchmark defines the upper detrimental threshold of plant-available potassium in soil above which livestock health issues occur in tropical and subtropical rainforests under livestock grazing.

Justification:

Based on agronomic and ecological literature linking high soil potassium to metabolic disorders in livestock.

Sources (1)

Preview of Potassium for high-performing pastures
Potassium for high-performing pastures GreyLiterature

Potassium for high-performing pastures | Nutrient Advantage

View Source

Supporting Sources (16)

Additional references from the underlying research that informed this benchmark.

Preview of (PDF) Soil potassium—crop response calibration relationships and criteria for field crops grown in Australia - ResearchGate, accessed July 18, 2025,
(PDF) Soil potassium—crop response calibration relationships and criteria for field crops grown in Australia - ResearchGate, accessed July 18, 2025,
Contextual Support Journal

Nutrient Cycling in Australian Savannas on JSTOR - DOI

View Source
Preview of Demonstrating productive, regenerative Burdekin grazing practices | Meat & Livestock Australia - MLA, accessed July 19, 2025,
Demonstrating productive, regenerative Burdekin grazing practices | Meat & Livestock Australia - MLA, accessed July 19, 2025,
Contextual Support GreyLiterature

Grazing intensity influence soil microbial communities and their ..., accessed July 19, 2025

View Source
Preview of Do regenerative grazing management practices improve vegetation and soil health in grazed rangelands? Preliminary insights from a space-for-time study in the Great Barrier Reef catchments, Australia - CSIRO Publishing, accessed August 5, 2025,
Do regenerative grazing management practices improve vegetation and soil health in grazed rangelands? Preliminary insights from a space-for-time study in the Great Barrier Reef catchments, Australia - CSIRO Publishing, accessed August 5, 2025,
Contextual Support Journal

Ludwig, J.A., Bastin, G.N., Chewings, V.H., Eager, R.W., and Liedloff, A.C. (2005). Clearing savannas for use as rangelands in Queensland: Altered landscapes and water-erosion processes. Rangeland Journal, 27(2), 135-149.

View Source
Preview of Do regenerative grazing management practices improve vegetation and soil health in grazed rangelands? Preliminary insights from a space-for-time study in the Great Barrier Reef catchments, Australia - ResearchGate, accessed July 19, 2025,
Do regenerative grazing management practices improve vegetation and soil health in grazed rangelands? Preliminary insights from a space-for-time study in the Great Barrier Reef catchments, Australia - ResearchGate, accessed July 19, 2025,
Contextual Support Journal

Do regenerative grazing management practices improve vegetation and soil health in grazed rangelands? Preliminary insights from a space-for-time study in the Great Barrier Reef catchments, Australia - ResearchGate, accessed July 17, 2025

View Source
Preview of Farm-scale nitrogen, phosphorus, potassium and sulfur balances and use efficiencies on Australian dairy farms - CSIRO Publishing, accessed July 18, 2025,
Farm-scale nitrogen, phosphorus, potassium and sulfur balances and use efficiencies on Australian dairy farms - CSIRO Publishing, accessed July 18, 2025,
Contextual Support Journal

Farm-scale nitrogen, phosphorus, potassium and sulfur balances and use efficiencies on Australian dairy farms - CSIRO Publishing

View Source
Preview of Plant nutrients in the soil - NSW Department of Primary Industries, accessed July 18, 2025,
Plant nutrients in the soil - NSW Department of Primary Industries, accessed July 18, 2025,
Contextual Support Government

Potassium In Soil Explained - Soil Quality Knowledge Base

View Source
Preview of Potassium | Fact Sheets | soilquality.org.au, accessed July 18, 2025,
Potassium | Fact Sheets | soilquality.org.au, accessed July 18, 2025,
Contextual Support Government

Potassium | Fact Sheets | soilquality.org.au, accessed July 18, 2025

View Source
Preview of Potassium Considerations for Nutrient Management - Gov.bc.ca, accessed July 18, 2025,
Potassium Considerations for Nutrient Management - Gov.bc.ca, accessed July 18, 2025,
Contextual Support Journal

Soil Fertility and Pastures for High Quality Raw Milk, accessed July 18, 2025

View Source
Preview of Potassium distribution in Ferrosols and its influence on rain-fed crop production in the South Burnett region of Queensland - UQ eSpace, accessed July 18, 2025,
Potassium distribution in Ferrosols and its influence on rain-fed crop production in the South Burnett region of Queensland - UQ eSpace, accessed July 18, 2025,
Contextual Support GreyLiterature

Potassium Considerations for Nutrient Management - Gov.bc.ca, accessed July 18, 2025

View Source
Preview of Potassium for high-performing pastures | Nutrient Advantage, accessed July 18, 2025,
Potassium for high-performing pastures | Nutrient Advantage, accessed July 18, 2025,
Direct Evidence Journal

Potassium for high rainfall pastures - DPIRD's Digital library

View Source
Preview of Soil and tissue tests to predict pasture yield responses to applications of potassium fertiliser in high-rainfall areas of south-western Australia | Request PDF - ResearchGate, accessed July 18, 2025,
Soil and tissue tests to predict pasture yield responses to applications of potassium fertiliser in high-rainfall areas of south-western Australia | Request PDF - ResearchGate, accessed July 18, 2025,
Contextual Support Direct Evidence Journal

What are the optimum nutrient targets for pastures?, accessed July 18, 2025

View Source
Preview of Soil Fertility and Pastures for High Quality Raw Milk, accessed July 18, 2025,
Soil Fertility and Pastures for High Quality Raw Milk, accessed July 18, 2025,
Contextual Support GreyLiterature

Soil Fertility and Pastures for High Quality Raw Milk, accessed July 18, 2025,

View Source
Preview of The development and application of functions ... - CSIRO Publishing, accessed July 18, 2025,
The development and application of functions ... - CSIRO Publishing, accessed July 18, 2025,
Contextual Support Journal

The development and application of functions ... - CSIRO Publishing, accessed July 18, 2025

View Source
Preview of The impact of deforestation and pasture abandonment on soil properties in the wet tropics of Australia - ResearchGate, accessed July 18, 2025,
The impact of deforestation and pasture abandonment on soil properties in the wet tropics of Australia - ResearchGate, accessed July 18, 2025,
Contextual Support

Tool 6.7 Soil health benchmarks and guidelines for managing ..., accessed July 18, 2025,

View Source
Preview of What are the optimum nutrient targets for pastures? - Soil Health Knowledgebase, accessed August 5, 2025,
What are the optimum nutrient targets for pastures? - Soil Health Knowledgebase, accessed August 5, 2025,
Contextual Support Government

What are the optimum nutrient targets for pastures? - Soil Health Knowledgebase, accessed July 18, 2025

View Source
Preview of www.dpi.nsw.gov.au, accessed on May 25, 2025,
www.dpi.nsw.gov.au, accessed on May 25, 2025,
Contextual Support Journal

Plant nutrients in the soil - NSW Department of Primary Industries, accessed July 18, 2025

View Source

Context

  • Region Australia
  • Biome Tropical & Subtropical Rainforests
  • Land Use Livestock Grazing & Pasture
  • Assessment Not Stated
  • Evidence Type DegradationThreshold

Lifecycle

  • Status Active
  • Version 1
  • Effective From 1 Jun 2026

Notes

Exceeding 280-300 mg/kg potassium in soil can cause 'luxury consumption' by forage and metabolic disorders in livestock, indicating agroecosystem health failure. AssessmentContext defaulted to 'Not Stated' because the source document did not state one.