Combined N,P, K fertilization and liming maximises crop productivity of acid loams in Lithuania |
| |
Authors: | Benediktas Jankauskas Erasmus Otabbong |
| |
Affiliation: | 1. Kaltin?nai Research Station of Lithuanian Institute of Agriculture , Varniu? 17, LT-5926, ?ilal? District, Lithuania;2. Department of Soil Sciences , Swedish University of Agricultural Sciences , P.O. Box 7014, SE-750 07, Uppsala, Sweden |
| |
Abstract: | Crop response to fertilization and liming was investigated in field and pot trials on sandy loam Dystric Albeluvisols (pH 4.2–4.3). Treatments in the field trial were: 1, no fertilizer; 2, PK; 3, NK; 4, NP; 5, NPK; 6, lime; 7, lime+PK; 8, lime+NK; 9, lime+NP; 10, lime+NPK. In the pot trial, they were: 1, no fertilizer; 2, N; 3, P; 4, K; 5, NP; 6, NK; 7, PK; and 8, NPK applied to unlimed and limed soils. All treatments were in four replicates. Crops sensitive to soil acidity (winter wheat, fodder beet, spring barley and clover-timothy ley) and the less acid-sensitive winter rye, potatoes, oats and lupins and oats mixture were sown in the field trial. In the pot trial, the acid-sensitive spring barley and red clover, and the less acid-sensitive oats and lupin-oats served as the test crops. Combined application of fertilizers (NPK) increased yields of crops sensitive to soil acidity in plots receiving lime by 23%, and those of crops less sensitive to soil acidity by 18% in comparison to crops grown on unlimed soils. The results of pot experiments corroborated the field results. When N was applied alone, crop yields were always higher than those recorded for P or K treatments on both the unlimed and limed treatments. N application proved to be a prerequisite for high crop yields in the soils investigated. Thus, the efficiency of P and K fertilizers increased in the order NK
|
| |
Keywords: | acid sensitive crops less acid sensitive crops liming mineral fertilization pH tolerance pot and field trials |
|
|