304-11 Sugarcane Technological Quality Cultivated in Different Sources of Fertilization Supplemented Soil, Using a Commercial Organic Compost.
Poster Number 850
See more from this Division: SSSA Division: Nutrient Management & Soil & Plant AnalysisSee more from this Session: Manure/Organic Nutrient Source Management
Tuesday, November 4, 2014
Long Beach Convention Center, Exhibit Hall ABC
This experiment aimed to assess the sugarcane technological quality grow in different
sources of fertilization supplemented soil with or without use of the organic compost MICROGEO.
The work was installed and conducted in Faculdade de Ciências Agrárias e Veterinárias/UNESP,
Jaboticabal, São Paulo state, Brasil. The design was a randomized block design in a factorial 5x2
(5 forms of fertilization and 2 levels of application of organic fertilizer) with 3 replications.
The experiment cultivation was on April 4th, 2009, with supplementation of the first factor, composed
of the five sources of fertilization: T1 (liming); T2 (filter cake and vinasse); T3 (filter cake, vinasse
and half of the recommended phosphate fertilization); T4 (filter cake, vinasse and complete recommended phosphate
fertilizer); T5 (recommended mineral fertilization). The second factor studied was the use of organic
fertilizer, applied on January 31, 2013. Close to experiment harvest, the tecnological quality of the
materials were measured in laboratory, on October 13th, 2013, determinating the variants Brix, Pol, Reducing
Sugar (RS), Total Reducing Sugar (TRS), Fiber, and Moisture, according to the method proposed by CONSECANA.
In possession of this results, the Total Sugar Recoverable (TSR) was calculated. The obtained results were
subjected to analysis of variance by F test, and when there was significance, the means were compared by Tukey
test at 5% probability. For TRS, TSR and Pol, the sources of fertilization showed differences, with the liming
tratament (T1) obtaining the higher values, explained by the longer period of sugar storage, due to the stress
caused by lack of nutrients in the soil, including organic fertilization. There was a positive correlation between
sources of fertilization and the organic compost for the variant Reducing Sugar, with the treatment with filter cake,
vinasse and recommended phosphate fertilizer (T4) getting smaller value among the fertilization sources using the
organic compost.
Keywords: filTer cake; Pol; TSR
See more from this Division: SSSA Division: Nutrient Management & Soil & Plant AnalysisSee more from this Session: Manure/Organic Nutrient Source Management