Back to Search Start Over

Importance of the subsoil for the K nutrition of crops

Authors :
H. Kuhlmann
Source :
Plant and Soil. 127:129-136
Publication Year :
1990
Publisher :
Springer Science and Business Media LLC, 1990.

Abstract

A K/Rb isotope dilution method was used to determine the uptake of K from undisturbed subsoils. Rb was applied to the topsoil (0–30 cm) to trace the K taken up from the topsoil by crops. The K/Rb ratio in the crops increases when roots contact the Rb-free subsoil. This change in the K/Rb ratio enables the calculation of the uptake of K from the subsoil. Results of 34 field experiments on loess-parabrown soils in N. Germany showed that the subsoil (>30 cm) supplied, on average, 34% of the total K uptake by spring wheat (range 9–70%). The range between the experimental sites is considered in relation to the contents of K in the top and subsoils (as extracted by 0.025 N CaCl2 solution), the proportion of the total root length in the subsoils, and competition for K between roots in the top and subsoil. In subsoils with similar K contents, uptake from the subsoil decreased significantly from 65 to 21% of total K uptake, as K contents in the topsoils increased from 4 to 8 mg K/100 g. On sites with the same K contents in topsoils (9 mg K/100 g), the subsoil supplied 12 to 61% of total K uptake as the K contents of the subsoil increased from 2 to 27 mg K/100 g. The contribution of uptake of K from the subsoil increased with the development of the crop, from 8% at first node stage to 35% at ear emergence, as the proportion of total root length in the subsoil increased. High root length densities in the topsoil (9 cm/cm3) resulted in competition for K between roots and increased uptake of K from the subsoil.

Details

ISSN :
15735036 and 0032079X
Volume :
127
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Plant and Soil
Accession number :
edsair.doi...........b6e1d7e3d1d03bc3c159c92968dd3e18