Soil Potassium
Benchmark Value
Scoring Curve
This curve shows how a field measurement for this indicator would score across all available benchmark forms in this context. The scoring engine uses 3 benchmarks together — the OptimalRange form drives the primary score, while 2 guard(s) constrain the result.
Contributing Benchmarks
Evidence & Context
Agriculture Victoria provides indicative "low" potassium levels for pastures (using Colwell-K or Exchangeable K tests): <50 mg/kg for sands and <80 mg/kg for sandy loams are considered low.
Critical lower threshold of soil potassium concentration below which ecosystem function is impaired.
Lower critical threshold for potassium deficiency in sandy soils.
Indicative low potassium levels from agricultural guidelines for similar Australian soil types suggest levels below 50 mg/kg are likely to compromise plant growth and ecosystem function.
Sources (1)
Agriculture Victoria. (2024). Understanding soil tests for pastures.
View SourceSupporting Sources (4)
Additional references from the underlying research that informed this benchmark.
Daws, M. I., Standish, R. J., Grigg, A. H., Morald, T. K., & Tibbett, M. (2021). Seeing the forest for the trees: fertiliser increases tree growth but decreases understorey diversity in the Northern Jarrah Forest, southwest Australia. Journal of the Royal Society of Western Australia, 104, 5-9.
View SourceProber, S. M., Thiele, K. R., & Loneragan, W. A. (2005). Relationships among soil fertility, native plant diversity and exotic plant abundance inform restoration of forb-rich eucalypt woodlands. Austral Ecology, 30(6), 607-618.
View SourceSapsford, S. J., Paap, T., Hardy, G. E. St. J., & Burgess, T. I. (2021). Anthropogenic Disturbance Impacts Mycorrhizal Communities and Abiotic Soil Properties: Implications for an Endemic Forest Disease. Frontiers in Forests and Global Change, 3, 593243.
View SourceUnderstanding soil tests for pastures
View Source