Journal article

EXPLOITATION OF POTASSIUM BY VARIOUS CROP SPECIES FROM PRIMARY MINERALS IN SOILS RICH IN MICAS


Authors listMENGEL, K; RAHMATULLAH

Publication year1994

Pages75-79

JournalBiology and Fertility of Soils

Volume number17

Issue number1

ISSN0178-2762

eISSN1432-0789

DOI Linkhttps://doi.org/10.1007/BF00418676

PublisherSpringer


Abstract
We investigated the question of whether exchangeable K+ is a reliable factor for K+ availability to plants on representative arable soils (Aridisols) rich in K+-bearing minerals. Five soils with different textures were collected from different locations in Pakistan and used for pot experiments. The soils were separated into sand, silt, and clay fractions and quartz sand was added to each fraction to bring it to 1 kg per kg whole soil, i.e., for each fraction the quartz sand replaced the weight of the two excluded fractions. On these soil fraction-quartz mixtures wheat, elephant grass, maize, and barley were cultivated in a rotational sequence. Growth on the sand mixture was very poor and except for the elephant grass all species showed severe K+-deficiency symptoms. Growth on the mixture with silt and clay fractions was much better than on the sand fraction; there was no major difference in growth and K+ supply to plants whether grown on silt or clay, although the clay fraction was rich and the silt fraction poor in exchangeable K+. On both these fractions the plant-available K+ supply was suboptimal and the plants showed deficiency symptoms except for the elephant grass. This plant species had a relatively low growth rate but it grew similarly on sand, silt, and clay and did not show any K+ deficiency symptoms, with the K+ concentration in the plant tops indicating a sufficient K+ supply regardless of which soil fraction the plants were grown in. The reason for this finding is not yet understood and needs further investigation. It is concluded that on soils rich in mica, exchangeable K+ alone is a poor indicator of K+ availability to plants and that mica concentrations in the silt and clay fraction are of greater importance in supplying crops with K+ than exchangeable K+.



Citation Styles

Harvard Citation styleMENGEL, K. and RAHMATULLAH (1994) EXPLOITATION OF POTASSIUM BY VARIOUS CROP SPECIES FROM PRIMARY MINERALS IN SOILS RICH IN MICAS, Biology and Fertility of Soils, 17(1), pp. 75-79. https://doi.org/10.1007/BF00418676

APA Citation styleMENGEL, K., & RAHMATULLAH (1994). EXPLOITATION OF POTASSIUM BY VARIOUS CROP SPECIES FROM PRIMARY MINERALS IN SOILS RICH IN MICAS. Biology and Fertility of Soils. 17(1), 75-79. https://doi.org/10.1007/BF00418676



Keywords


ARIDISOLSEXCHANGEABLE K+GRASSESMICA-RICH SOILSPOTASSIUM ACQUISITIONSILT AND CLAY FRACTIONS


SDG Areas


Last updated on 2025-02-04 at 07:08