127-2 Relationships Between Potassium Fertilization, Removal with Harvest and Concentrations in Soil Pools for Long-Term Corn-Soybean Rotations.

See more from this Division: S08 Nutrient Management & Soil & Plant Analysis
See more from this Session: S04-S08 Graduate Student Competition
Monday, November 1, 2010
Long Beach Convention Center, Exhibit Hall BC, Lower Level

Carlos Villavicencio and Antonio Mallarino, Department of Agronomy, Iowa State University, Ames, IA
More research is needed to understand large soil-test K (STK) temporal variability and inconsistent relationships between K application rates, removal, and STK. These issues were studied using five 15-year experiments with corn-soybean rotations managed with no-tillage. Treatments were broadcast and planter-band K placement methods and several K application rates. Measurements were grain yield, grain K concentration, K removal with harvest, STK and non-exchangeable K for selected treatments, and soil sampling depths. Potassium fertilization had a small effect on grain K concentration but often increased both grain yield and K removal when STK was less than 150-180 mg K kg-1 (ammonium acetate test). Grain K concentration was poorly correlated with grain yield or STK, but there was a high correlation between K removal and yield. Average grain K concentration estimates used in Iowa for STK maintenance fertilization (4.2 and 22.3 g K kg-1 for corn and soybean) were among the highest concentrations observed for each crop. There was a clear vertical stratification of both STK and non-exchangeable K. Non-exchangeable K measurements partially explained large STK variability across K application rates and years.