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The use of soil solution K value for assessing the K status of soil during a rotation of crops

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  27 March 2009

K. N. Sharma
Affiliation:
Department of Agronomy, Punjab Agricultural University, Ludhiana 141004, India
Bijay Singh
Affiliation:
Department of Agronomy, Punjab Agricultural University, Ludhiana 141004, India
D. S. Rana
Affiliation:
Department of Agronomy, Punjab Agricultural University, Ludhiana 141004, India

Extract

In the last two decades significant progress has been made in understanding the factors and processes affecting the K requirement of crops. Simultaneously analytical techniques to study the behaviour of K in soil have been developed, on the understanding that soil controls the supply of nutrients to crop plants by adsorbing and sometimes fixing nutrients. As in solution culture, the concentration of K in the soil solution governs the uptake of K by plants. The soil matrix serves as a reservoir from which the soil solution is replenished. Monitoring K status of the soil solution under fixed crop sequences can provide a useful basis for improving fertilizer recommendations. Kconcentrations in the soil solution have, therefore, been measured on a soil in which a number of crops have been grown in fixed annual sequences in field experiments.

Type
Short Note
Copyright
Copyright © Cambridge University Press 1986

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References

REFERENCES

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