SOME EFFECTS OF SODIUM APPLICATION ON THE YIELD AND CHEMICAL-COMPOSITION OF PASTURE GROWN UNDER DIFFERING CONDITIONS OF POTASSIUM AND MOISTURE SUPPLY

Citation
A. Cushnahan et al., SOME EFFECTS OF SODIUM APPLICATION ON THE YIELD AND CHEMICAL-COMPOSITION OF PASTURE GROWN UNDER DIFFERING CONDITIONS OF POTASSIUM AND MOISTURE SUPPLY, Plant and soil, 176(1), 1995, pp. 117-127
Citations number
35
Categorie Soggetti
Agriculture Soil Science","Plant Sciences",Agriculture
Journal title
ISSN journal
0032079X
Volume
176
Issue
1
Year of publication
1995
Pages
117 - 127
Database
ISI
SICI code
0032-079X(1995)176:1<117:SEOSAO>2.0.ZU;2-R
Abstract
The effects of Na fertiliser (supplied as an NPK-Na compound) on herba ge yield and composition were examined at two different sites to see i f pasture responses to Na were affected by differences in K and moistu re availability. At one site, pasture was grown under conditions of mo isture stress and limited K availability, whereas at the other site th e pasture was grown under comparatively non-stress conditions. The res ults were interesting in that Na fertilisation appeared to be detrimen tal to pasture yield and quality under conditions of moisture stress a nd suboptimal K supply, whereas under the non-stress conditions it act ually increased herbage N offtake, marginally improved the nutritional quality of the pasture and produced appreciable (albeit non-significa nt) increases in DM yield. It was suggested that an important effect o f Na on grass production may have been its ability to enhance the rate of NO3- uptake by plants, thereby minimising NO3--N losses from the s oil-plant system by denitrification. However, because the amount of N fertiliser used in the experiments (i.e. 390 kg N ha(-1) yr(-1)) was c lose to that normally required for maximum yield production (N max) un der Northern Ireland conditions, the scope for yield increases in resp onse to Na-elicited improvements in N offtake were thought to have bee n very limited at both experimental sites. On the basis of results fro m both the present study and previous field trials, a unifying theory is presented to explain the differential effects of Na on NO3- uptake and herbage growth under different sets of circumstances.