145-2 Correction of Potassium Deficiency In Soybean Production In Kansas.



Monday, October 17, 2011: 8:20 AM
Henry Gonzalez Convention Center, Room 209, Concourse Level

Jason D. Matz, Kansas State University, Manhattan, KS and David Mengel, Department of Agronomy, Kansas State University, Manhattan, KS
Over the last decade low soil test K levels and K deficiency, especially in soybeans, has become a major concern in the claypan soils of southeast Kansas.  The use of more intense crop rotations (corn/wheat/double crop soybeans) and increased production of high K extracting crops such as soybeans has increased K removal.  The traditional use of nutrient sufficiency based fertilizer recommendations has also resulted in K application rates substantially below crop removal.  In addition, farmers and crop consultants who maintain good soil test records are reporting substantial variation in soil test K from year to year in the same soil sampling areas.  This project was initiated in 2009 to determine the extent of the K soil test variation seen between years and during the crop year, and if this variability was impacting K availability as indicated by leaf K content and crop yield.  Monthly soil tests during the past three crop years at multiple locations have shown the ammonium acetate exchangeable K levels to change as much as 50% during the growing season.  The changes seem to follow soil moisture and precipitation trends.  As soils dry, soil tests drop and rewetting increases K levels.  K content of the leaf tissue tends to follow soil test K levels.  However, no impact on corn or soybean yield, or response to spring applied K has been observed, if the spring soil test K level was initially above the current critical level of 130 mg kg-1
See more from this Division: S08 Nutrient Management & Soil & Plant Analysis
See more from this Session: S4/S8 Graduate Student Oral Competition-Managing Nutrients for Optimum Crop Production