A nitrogen deficient Oxisol which had been fertilized with P, K, Zn and Mo received CaCO3 at rates which increased continuously from zero to 22 tons/ha. Liming produced a range of p t t in the saturation paste from 4.7 to 7.1; a range of calcium in the saturation extract from 0.3 to 3 meq/1; and a s
Comparative lime requirements of tropical and temperate legumes
โ Scribed by D. N. Munns; R. L. Fox
- Publisher
- Springer
- Year
- 1977
- Tongue
- English
- Weight
- 790 KB
- Volume
- 46
- Category
- Article
- ISSN
- 0032-079X
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โฆ Synopsis
In a field trial using a continuous function design, calcium carbonate was applied to a nitrogen deficient Hawaiian Oxisol at rates which increased along the plant row from 0 to 22 tons/ha, producing a gradient in soil p H from 4.7 to 7.1. Inoculated legumes representing 18 species were grown.
Lime response curves showed no distinct general difference between tropical and temperate legumes. Within each group, individual species varied. Responsiveness rankings of species varied depending on criterion of response.
The species ranked as follows according to the amount of lime needed for 90% of the m a x i m u m attained yield : Coronilla varia (16 tons/ha) > Leucaena leucocephala (11) > Phaseolus vulgaris, Medicago sativa (9-10) > Glycine max var. Kanrich (7) > Glycine wightii var. Cooper, Lotus corniculatus (6) > Glycine wightii var. Tinaroo, Tri/olium repens, Tri/olium subterraneum (5) > Desmodium canum, Dolichos axillaris, Glycine max var. Kahala (4) > Arachis hypogea, Desmodium intortum, Vigna sinensis (1-2) > Stylosanthes /ruticosa, Stylosanthes gu yanensis (0.1).
The species ranked as follows according to the magnitude of yield increase due to lime : C. varia (20-fold increase) > T. repens (9-fold) > L. leucocephala, D. axillaris, M. sativa (6-fold) > G. wightii var. Tinaroo (5-fold) > P. vulgaris (4-fold) > G. wightii var. Cooper, L. corniculatus (3-fold) > D. canum, D. intortum, T. subterraneum (2-fold) > A. hypogea, G. max, S. /ruticosa, S. guyanensis, V. sinensis (30-50%).
I m p r o v e d calcium availability could account for plant responses to lime rates over 3 to 4 tons/ha. Only 4 tons CaCOs sufficed to raise soil p H to 6 and depress solution a l u m i n u m and manganese to low concentrations, but 6 tons were needed to raise soluble calcium to 1 meq/1 and 20 tons to raise it to 3 meq/1.
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