The relationship between soil phosphorus and response by sugar beet to phosphate fertilizer on mineral soils

A - Papers appearing in refereed journals

Draycott, A. P., Durrant, M. J. and Boyd, D. A. 1971. The relationship between soil phosphorus and response by sugar beet to phosphate fertilizer on mineral soils. The Journal of Agricultural Science. 77 (1), pp. 117-121. https://doi.org/10.1017/S0021859600023558

AuthorsDraycott, A. P., Durrant, M. J. and Boyd, D. A.
Abstract

Results of two groups of experiments testing phosphate fertilizer for sugar beet were re-examined; there were 53 experiments made between 1957 and 1960 in group 1 and 25 experiments between 1957 and 1959 in group 2. The mean response of total sugar to 126 kg/ha P2O5 was only 160 kg/ha but on a few fields response exceeded 1000 kg/ha. Response seemed to be greater in 1958 than in the other years, but between-site variance accounted for most of the difference from year to year.

Stored soil samples were analysed for phosphorus by four methods; the results were compared and related to the yield response to phosphate fertilizer. After allowing for experimental error, the percentages of the between-sites variance of the responses accounted for by log (soil P) were (group 1 first): sodium bicarbonate, 60 and 62%; anion resin, 52 and 30%; ammonium acetate/acetic acid, 52 and 0%; and calcium chloride, 42 and 2%. When soil pH was included in the regression equation, prediction of response by anion resin much improved and equalled that of sodium bicarbonate. Ammonium acetate/acetic acid was ineffective on soils with much free calcium carbonate.

As two-thirds of the soils had sodium bicarbonate-soluble phosphorus concentrations between 15 and 45 ppm P with mean response 65 kg/ha sugar, there is only limited scope for increasing the profitability of the crop by improving P manuring. However, more P fertilizer can be recommended for the few soils with ≤ 10 ppm P and P fertilizer can be withheld from fields with more than 45 ppm. The dressings we recommend are 180, 120, 60, 30 and 0 kg/ha P2O5 (approximately 1·5, 1·0, 0·5, 0·25 and 0 cwt/acr P2O5) on soils with ≤ 10, 11·15, 16·25, 26·45 and ≥45 ppm sodium bicarbonatesoluble P respectively.
RESP-6412

Year of Publication1971
JournalThe Journal of Agricultural Science
Journal citation77 (1), pp. 117-121
Digital Object Identifier (DOI)https://doi.org/10.1017/S0021859600023558
Open accessPublished as non-open access
PublisherCambridge University Press (CUP)
ISSN0021-8596

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