72-2 Soil Potassium Test Recalibration and Sampling Time for Corn in North Dakota.

See more from this Division: SSSA Division: Soil Fertility and Plant Nutrition
See more from this Session: S4/S8 M.S. Oral Competition

Monday, November 7, 2016: 9:50 AM
Phoenix Convention Center North, Room 129 B

John S. Breker, PO Box 6050, North Dakota State University, Fargo, ND and David W. Franzen, North Dakota State University, Fargo, ND
Abstract:
Potassium (K) fertilizer recommendations for corn (Zea mays, L.) are commonly guided by yield response calibrations to soil test potassium (STK) levels; however, soil sample drying and date of soil sampling have been shown to affect STK values. Furthermore, yield responses to K fertilizer may be inconsistent on low and high STK soils. Field trials were established in southeastern North Dakota to evaluate soil K testing methodologies and their relationship to corn grain yield and to assess temporal STK variation. Plot treatments included six KCl rates (0 to 167.5 kg K2O ha-1) and one fallow control treatment to assess STK changes without plant uptake. Soil samples (0-15 cm depth) were collected biweekly during the growing season and analyzed for NH4OAc-extractable K on air-dry (DK) and field-moist (MK) subsamples. A cation-exchange resin and a NaBPh4 extraction method were also evaluated for their ability to extract some plant-available nonexchangeable K in addition to exchangeable K. A mineralogical analysis for K-bearing minerals and clay speciation was employed to help address inconsistences between STK and corn yield responses. Sample drying significantly increased STK, and the DK/MK ratio was related to the MK level but not the DK level. Both DK and MK levels were significantly affected by sampling date at most sites, with highest STK in spring and lowest STK in fall, appearing to follow a sinusoidal pattern. Significant yield responses were not adequately predicted by the current 150 mg kg-1 DK critical level. Quadratic models of relative yield regressed against STK from the different testing methodologies were evaluated for their ability to predict yield response to K fertilization.

See more from this Division: SSSA Division: Soil Fertility and Plant Nutrition
See more from this Session: S4/S8 M.S. Oral Competition