Rasta Roy
Well-Known Member
Gypsum doesn't become more available by composting (aka"cooking). It becomes available Everytime water is applied to it. It dissolves through weathering, releasing calcium and sulfur into the soil along the way.Not saying here that supersoil will increase availability., My point is that yes of course is water soluble, but minimal like 3%., but in order for the plant to uptake it it needs time to ''cook" ., Not like you apply your gypsum today and tomorrow the plant will be already uptaking it.
We get that gypsum isn't liquid calcium...But you're literally arguing with an agricultural textbook.
"Gypsum has calcium sulphate in the dihydrate form (two water molecules with each calcium sulphate) making it somewhat more soluble than the anhydrous form of calcium sulphate. A small amount of gypsum can dissolve at once in the soil solution (limit is 0.24 g per 100 mL of water at 20oC). Once the soil solution reaches the limit of calcium sulphate in solution, gypsum starts to precipitate again. Thus there is a fast provision of calcium and sulphate into soil solution for plant uptake or effect on the soil but the overall rate of release from gypsum is controlled by the rate with which the calcium and sulphate are taken or move from the soil solution.
As gypsum dissolves, one sulphate ion is released with each calcium ion. Since a sulphur atom is lighter than a calcium atom, the amount of sulphur released is around 75% of the amount of calcium by weight.
Calcium sulphate is much more soluble than calcium carbonate (lime) and over time will release calcium at a significantly faster rate than the weathering of lime. Time of release is variable depending on soil conditions including moisture level (dryer is slower), drainage (fastersoil water velocity means more ability for the gypsum to dissolve as calcium moves downwards), soluble salt level (higher levels of some salts can make it slower), sodium level (higher sodium level makes it faster as the calcium goes on to the exchange sites allowing more gypsum to dissolve) and the general ability for the soil (and plants) to “absorb” calcium and sulphate from the soil solution."