Abstract
An experiment was conducted to determine the influence of continuous cropping and K fertilization on plants grown on coarse‐textured soils high in feldspars. The A and C horizons of Elsmere (sandy, mixed, mesic Aquic Haplustoll), Valentine (mixed, mesic Typic Ustipsamment) and Sharpsburg (fine, montmorillonitic, mesic Typic Arguidoll) soils were continuously cropped in the greenhouse with annual ryegrass (Lolium multiflorum Lam.). Four K treatments (0, 18.5, 37.5 and 75.0 mg K/kg soil) were applied before planting. At approximately 4 week intervals, above ground plant tissue was harvested and analyzed for K content for a total of 12 cuttings. Potassium deficiency symptoms (marginal necrosis, spotting) eventually appeared in plants grown on all but the A horizon of the Sharpsburg soil. Continuous cropping decreased plant K concentration, averaged across all treatments, from 38 to 10 g/kg dry matter. Potassium fertilization increased K concentration in plant dry matter on the soils initially low in slowly available and exchangeable K, but did not increase biomass. Uptake was higher by plants grown on A horizons. Different K rates resulted in different cumulative K uptake on the soils initially low in available K.
Notes
Received as paper No. 8739, Agric. Res. Div., Institute of Agriculture and Natural Resources, University of Nebraska‐Lincoln.
Present address: Department of Soil Science, University of Wisconsin‐Madison, Madison, WI.