RELATIVE AVAILABILITY TO PLANTS OF PHOSPHORUS FROM ROCK PHOSPHATE AND TRIPLE SUPERPHOSPHATEIN RELATION TO LIMING ON MALAYSIAN PEAT

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Parent Category: 1981

W.Y. CHEW, Y.K. CHIN, L. ISMAIL and K. RAMLI

SUMMARY

Two greenhouse experiment studied the effects of liming and P fertilization on sorghum and napier grass on acid  peat . Liming increased soil soluble P. crop dry matter and P uptake, sorghurm being more sensitive to peat acidity than napier grass. Both crops responded to applied P only with liming. On limed peat napier grass was more responsive to applied P than sorghum producing optimum dry matter at 20 kg/ha, compared to 10 kg for sorghum. In both crops. Triple superphosphate gave greater growth, plant P content and P uptake than rock phosphate. Increasing rate of either P carrier increased plant dry matter, plant P content and P uptake but positive responses to increasing rates of P and to P carriers were obserred only in the first sorghum and first two napier grass harvests, and not subsequently. The % recovery of applied P decreased in sorghum, but increased in napier grass, as P was increased.

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