1. Soil phosphorus effects on ryegrass (Lolium perenne L.) production on a Hydrosol in Tasmania.
- Author
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Cotching, WE and Burkitt, LL
- Subjects
- *
PHOSPHORUS in soils , *RYEGRASSES , *PASTURES , *FERTILIZERS , *DAIRY farmers , *WATERWAYS - Abstract
Soil phosphorus (P) concentrations in excess of those required to maximise pasture production impose unnecessary costs on farmers and potentially increase the risk of P runoff to waterways. The relationship between soil available P concentration and pasture production was examined on an Oxyaquic Hydrosol. Mean annual pasture production ranged from 18,415 to 21,834 kg DM/ha over the 3-year sampling period. There was no significant difference in the annual DM production at Olsen P concentrations of 23-81 mg/kg measured from the 0-75 mm sampling depth. Results show that there was no increase in pasture production when soil Olsen P concentrations exceeded 23 mg/kg (0-75 mm). The optimum soil Olsen P ranges determined in the current study are well below the mean paddock concentrations previously measured in northwest Tasmania (54 mg/kg) and suggest that such high concentrations are not justified in terms of optimising pasture growth. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2011
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