1. Soybean Phosphorus- Use Efficiency in the Moist Savanna of West Africa.
- Author
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Ogoke, I. J., Togun, A. O., and Dashiell, K. E.
- Subjects
WILD rice ,HYBRID rice ,SEED industry ,AGRICULTURAL innovations ,ANGIOSPERMS ,SOWING ,AGRICULTURAL extension workers ,FARMERS - Abstract
With limited access to P fertilizers, soybean (Glycine max (L.) Merr.) varieties cultivated in the moist savanna zone of West Africa should use P as efficiently as possible. Field trials were conducted on the effect of P application on grain yield per unit P accumulated (physiological efficiency or PPE), amount of P accumulated in plant biomass per unit P applied in fertilizer (recovery efficiency or PRE), and the amount of grain produced per unit of applied P (yield efficiency or PYE) in soybean. There was greater proportional root proliferation at lower P rates, and at sites where soil test P was low. Physiological efficiency was higher under these conditions. Although a greater proportion of total dry weight was accumulated in the roots of the early and medium (27-28%) compared with the late varieties (22-23%), root dry weight and PPE in the latter were higher. At maturity, PPE was significantly reduced from 245 kg kg
-1 with no P applied to an average of 173 kg-1 (or by about 29%) with P application. Phosphorus yield efficiency was higher at sites (Kasuwan Magani and Gidan Waya) and in the late varieties where response to P was highest. PYE with 60 kg ha-1 P applied rate was almost half the value observed with 30 kg P ha-1 . [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2006
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