Wb. Gordon et Da. Whitney, Effects of phosphorus application method and rate on furrow-irrigated ridge-tilled grain sorghum, J PLANT NUT, 23(1), 2000, pp. 23-34
Conservation tillage systems, including ridge-tillage, have become increasi
ng popular with producers in the central Great Plains because of their effe
ctiveness in controlling soil erosion and conserving water. A major disadva
ntage of the ridge system is that nutrient placement options are limited by
lack of any primary tillage options. The objective of this research was to
investigate the effects of method of phosphorus (P) placement and rate on
irrigated grain sorghum [Sorghum bicolor (L.) Moench] grown in a ridge-till
age system on a soil low in available P. This experiment was conducted from
1993 to 1995 on a producer's field near the North Central Kansas Experimen
t Field at Scandia, Kansas on a Carr sandy loam soil (course, loamy, mixed,
calcareous, mesic, Typic Udifuvents). Treatments consisted of fertilizer a
pplication methods, surface broadcast, single band starter (5 cm to the sid
e and 5 cm below seed), dual band starter (one band on each side of the row
), and knifed in the center of the row middle (38 cm from each adjacent row
). Each of these treatments was made at either 22 or 44 kg P2O5 ha(-1), and
nitrogen (N) also was included at the rate of 13 kg ha(-1). Additional tre
atments were, a combination of 13 kg N and 44 kg P2O5 ha(-1) applied half b
roadcast and half as a single band starter, a 1:1 N:P2O5 ratio (44 kg N and
44 kg P2O5 ha(-1)) applied as a single band starter, and a 3:1 ratio (134
kg N and 44 kg P2O5 ha(-1)) applied as a single band starter. A no-P check
plot also was included. Broadcast and center-of-row middle knife applicatio
ns were made approximately 1 week before planting. After planting, N was ba
lanced on all plots to give a total of 180 kg ha(-1). Applied P treatments
improved grain yield and nutrient uptake and consistently shortened the tim
e from emergence to mid-bloom in ail 3 years of the experiment. On this low
soil test P soil, treatments that subsurface banded P increased grain yiel
d by 1.27 Mg ha(-1) compared to broadcast treatments. Placing N and P in a
single starter band 5 cm to the side and 5 cm below the seed was as effecti
ve as placing a band on each side of the row. Knife applying N and P in the
center of the row was not as effective as placement beside the row. Single
band starter application of N and P in a 1.1 and or 3:1 N:P2O5 ratio consi
stently increased yields and nutrient uptake and shortened the time to mid-
bloom as compared to the single band starter treatment that provided only 1
3 kg N ha(-1). Over the 3 years of the study, these 1:1 and 3:1 N:P2O5 rati
o starters were clearly superior to an other treatments.