Iron (Fe) toxicity is a major nutrient disorder affecting the production of
wetland rice in the humid zone of West Africa. Little attention has been g
iven to determining the macro- and micronutrient composition of rice plants
grown on wetland soils where Fe toxicity is present although results from
such study could provide useful information about the involvement of other
nutrients in the occurrence of Fe toxicity. A field experiment was conducte
d in the 1997 dry season (January-May) at an Fe toxic site in Korhogo, Ivor
y Coast, to determine the elemental composition of Fe tolerant (CK 4) and s
usceptible (Bouake 189) lowland rice varieties without and with application
of nitrogen (N), phosphorus (P), potassium (K), and zinc (Zn). For both Fe
-tolerant and susceptible varieties, there were no differences in elemental
composition of the whole plant rice tops, sampled at 30 and 60 days after
transplanting rice seedlings, except for Fe. All the other nutrient element
concentrations were adequate. Both Fe-tolerant and susceptible cultivars h
ad a high Fe content, well above the critical limit (300 mg Fe kg(-1) plant
dry wt). These results along with our observations on the elemental compos
ition of rice plant samples collected from several wetland swamp soils with
Fe toxicity in West Africa suggest that "real" iron toxicity is a single n
utrient (Fe) toxicity and not a multiple nutrient deficiency stress.