Potassium deficiency and its management in a long-term rotation experiment in the south-western slopes New South Wales
G. D. Li, K. R. Helyar, M. K. Conyers, P. D. Cregan, B. R. Cullis, G. J. Poile, R. P. Fisher and L. J. C. Castleman
Australian Journal of Experimental Agriculture
41(4) 497 - 505
Published: 2001
Abstract
Potassium (K) deficiency of wheat and pasture species was found at a site in the south-western slopes of New South Wales. The soil was a subnatric yellow sodosol. Subterranean clover (Trifolium subterraneum) was found to be less competitive for K in the soil compared with its associated grasses. Higher soil K concentrations were required to achieve the same subterranean clover K concentration in the grass–legume mixtures than in a subterranean clover monoculture. For wheat (Triticum aestivum) production, a soil exchangeable K (Kex ) below 0.25 cmol(+)/kg appeared to be deficient for the limed treatments, but there was no obvious critical value for either limed or unlimed treatments. The critical K exvalues for the grass –legume mixtures could not be simply specified because the values were affected by competition between species growing in swards of variable botanical composition. An annual rate of 20 kg K/ha for the pasture–crop rotations (50/50%) and 29 kg K/ha for the permanent pastures was estimated to be sufficient to replenish the K losses from product removal and animal excreta transferred to campsites at this trial site.https://doi.org/10.1071/EA00108
© CSIRO 2001