1 / 15

Field Evaluation of Approaches for Reducing Reliance on P and K Fertilizers

Field Evaluation of Approaches for Reducing Reliance on P and K Fertilizers . Gregory Porter and Paul Ocaya Department of Plant, Soil & Environmental Sciences University of Maine, Orono. Aroostook Research Farm, Presque Isle, ME. Updated Potash Recommendations.

leda
Télécharger la présentation

Field Evaluation of Approaches for Reducing Reliance on P and K Fertilizers

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Field Evaluation of Approaches for Reducing Reliance on P and K Fertilizers Gregory Porter and Paul Ocaya Department of Plant, Soil & Environmental Sciences University of Maine, Orono Aroostook Research Farm, Presque Isle, ME

  2. Updated Potash Recommendations • Data from MPB funded experiments has been used to update soil test recommendations for potato • Peter Sexton, Bruce Hoskins, and Greg Porter • “Sufficiency” versus a “Build and Maintain” approach • Soil K plus fertilizer K20 to maximize crop value (yield, quality) • Lower potash recommendations on most soils, especially higher pH and CEC soils • Average savings of 50-60 lbs/A over current method

  3. Progress Report • 2011 Grant Received: • $18,000 Maine Potato Board • Potassium Management Experiments • Three experiments were conducted as planned evaluating “sufficiency-level” versus “build and maintain” approaches • Also included a treatment with reduced at-planting rates and foliar KTS treatments • Russet Burbank and Atlantic varieties, RCBD experiments with six replications per treatment • Three sites with a range of soil-test K levels

  4. 2011 Potassium Fertilization Experiments “Build & Maintain” versus “Sufficiency Approach”. Build&Maintain: 150 to 280 lbs/A K20 Sufficiency: 60 to 190 lbs/A K20 Foliar Program (total rate=sufficiency trt.): 15 to 145 lbs/A K20 at planting 45 lbs/A K20 as KTS (5 GPA follow by weekly 1 GPA) 2011 K experiment, site #1 2011 K experiment, site #3

  5. 2011 Potassium Experiment (Atl), Site #3 Applied rates were close to soil-test recommendations on this site. KTS program was 145 lbs/A K2O at planting, KCL followed by 45 lbs/A K2O as KTS (5 GPA in June followed by weekly 1 GPA applications).

  6. 2011 Potassium Experiment (RB), Site #2 Applied rates were above soil-test recommendations on this site. KTS program was 145 lbs/A K2O at planting, KCL followed by 45 lbs/A K2O as KTS (5 GPA in June followed by weekly 1 GPA applications).

  7. 2011 Potassium Experiments - Summary • Foliar Program with KTS • No evidence of yield or quality advantages. • Reduced Potash Rate: • Sufficiency-Level Recommendation showed promise for reducing K fertilizer costs, however: • More data needed given crop value implications, 3 sites isn’t enough information • Minimum K2O rate may need to be increased (to > 60 lbs/A) • NS, but yield trended down in 2 of 3 RB tests • Blackspot increased in 2 of 3 ATL tests; 1 of 3 RB tests Above: K exp #1. Below: K exp #3.

  8. Soil Test P Calibration • 2007-2009 Studies: • Weak response on 2 of 5 sites (40%) testing MH in Available P • No response on 3 sites • Fitzgerald, 1998: • 11 sites on commercial farms testing soils H in Available P (23 to 43 lbs/A based on Modified Morgan). • 1 of 11 sites (9%) had a significant yield response to P2O5 • 10 of 11 sites had no significant response Response of Atlantic Potatoes to P2O5 Fertilizer on Soils with High Available P:C. Fitzgerald, University of Maine, 1998

  9. Can P Fertilizer Rates Be Reduced? • YES • ME Soil Testing Service recommendations could save ~40-80 lbs/A P2O5 • P fertilizer rates might be further reduced following hay or green manures • Follow calibrated soil test guidelines • A minimum of 60-80 lbs per acre of banded P2O5 is recommended • Due to Al and Fe fixation • Exception: Long-term manure amended soils with VH Avail P Nutrient Management Plots, 2010

  10. 2011 Phosphorus Experiments • Experiment #1 • Russet Burbank • 0, 60, 120, 180, 240, and 300 lbs/A P2O5 • Short-term crop rotation treatments • potatoes oats • potatoes brassica green manure • potatoes oats/timothy/clover • Split-plot RCBD, 4 replications per treatment 2011 P Rate x Green Manure Experiment

  11. 2011 Phosphorus Experiments • Experiment #2 • Shepody • 60 versus 150 lbs/A P2O5 • Long-term crop rotation treatments • Potatoes-oats • Potatoes-brassica green manure • Potatoes-peas/clover • Potatoes-canola • Split-plot RCBD, 4 replications per treatment 2011 Long-term GM P and N Response Study, Shepody

  12. Summary – Phosphorus Studies • Two experiments were completed as planned: • No significant yield or quality benefits from the green manure crops versus the standard oat rotation • The results are consistent with recent studies suggesting that P2O5 rates can be reduced by 40 to 80 lbs/A • Green manure effects on P availability • No indication of increased availability based on yield response data • Crop uptake data will provide more conclusive evidence

  13. GM x N Experiment • Rotation crops compared: oats, canola, Caliente mustard, pea w/white clover • Pea w/white clover reduced N fertilizer requirement by 80-100 lbs/A after several rotation cycles • Caliente mustard reduced the amount of N fertilizer needed for potatoes (~40-60 lbs/A) compared to oats • Canola N benefit was inconsistent • Except at low N fertilization rates, yields were not consistently affected by rotation crop

  14. Outcomes … Information leading to: • P and K recommendations which will help maintain yield and quality • Potential P and K fertilizer savings in the range of 40-80 lbs/A or more P2O5 and K2O.

  15. Questions? • Comments? Paul Cyr Photo U.S Potato Board

More Related