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Mind Your P's and K's - Press Release, 2001
News release
issued May 22, 2001, effective immediately. For media inquiries, contact Caroline Booth Lara, Communications Specialist, (580)
224-6379.
email: cblara@noble.org
Mind your P's and K's
ARDMORE, Okla. -- Many articles discuss nitrogen fertilizer
management. After all, nitrogen is directly related to yield.
"But what about the importance of phosphorus and potassium
fertilization? Both are primary nutrients, meaning that they are required in large amounts by the plant,
yet rarely is information published with details regarding phosphorus and potassium nutrient management,"
explained Jeff
Ball, a soils and crops specialist with the Ardmore-based
Noble Foundation.
What is the function of these nutrients in the plant? What
is their behavior in the soil? What are plant symptoms that indicate their deficiency? How do you know
whether the soil is deficient in these nutrients and how do you correct the problem?
Phosphorus is a major component in plant DNA, the material
responsible for the transfer of genetic characteristics in all living things. Phosphorus is also critical
in root development, crop maturity, and seed production.
Potassium is required for the activation of over eighty enzymes
throughout the plant, and it increases water use efficiency and transforms sugars to starch in the grain-filling
process. In general, the role of phosphorus and potassium in the plant is maintenance. Both are highly
concentrated in new growth and are responsible for keeping the system operating smoothly.
Both phosphorus and potassium are immobile in the soil, meaning
they don't move readily with water.
"Let's compare the mobility of nitrogen, phosphorus,
and potassium on a scale of 1 to 10, 1 being immobile and 10 being readily mobile," Ball said.
"Nitrate nitrogen (NO3-) is a 10. It is extremely mobile and can be lost
to leaching, which is downward movement of water through the soil profile.
"Potassium is a 3. It has limited movement in the soil.
Increasing soil moisture from 10 to 28 percent increases potassium transport by 175 percent. This movement
of potassium is small and accounts for a small portion of the potassium absorbed by the plant."
Phosphorus has a rating of 1. It is extremely immobile in
the soil and is likely to stay wherever it is placed unless moved by erosion or crop export.
"You might wonder how the mobility of phosphorus and
potassium affects their availability to the plant," Ball said. "Mobile nutrients, such as
nitrogen, are available from a large volume of soil. As a plant acquires water from the soil, mobile
nutrients move with the water to the roots for uptake. Immobile nutrients are available from just a
small cylinder of soil around each root. In other words, a plant's root system has to explore the soil
to find available phosphorus and potassium."
Only a small percentage of the soil's total phosphorus and
potassium exists in a form available for plant uptake. The remainder is tied up with other elements,
organic matter, and the like. However, these bound nutrients can become plant-available sometime during
the growing season. As a plant takes up phosphorus and potassium, reserves readily replenish the soil
solution.
"Historically, the soils throughout the region (southern
Oklahoma and north central Texas) were rich in phosphorus and potassium. Over time, as land was farmed
or hayed, more nutrients were removed than were replaced by fertilization," Ball said. "As
a result, both phosphorus and potassium levels in some soils have dropped to insufficient levels. Phosphorus
deficiency symptoms include purple coloring in the leaf or sometimes yellowing on the lower or oldest
leaves. Potassium deficiency symptoms are chlorosis or dieback beginning at the leaf tip and moving
toward the base along the outer edges."
How would someone determine if soil is deficient in phosphorus
and/or potassium?
"Soil testing is the answer, Ball said. "Unlike
that for nitrogen and sulfur, phosphorus and potassium requirements are not based on yield goal but
instead are based on soil test values and their corresponding sufficiency levels. Years of university
research have been performed to correlate laboratory phosphorus and potassium test results to crop response
in the field."
A soil test measures the concentration of extractable phosphorus
and potassium, not the total amount.
"In other words, a soil test predicts how much phosphorus
and potassium will become plant-available through the growing season," Ball noted. "A good
analogy is a dipstick on a tractor. The dipstick measures the oil level, not the total amount in the
crankcase. If the dipstick reads full, then there is no benefit from adding oil. If it reads one quart
low, though, oil must be added to assure peak engine performance. The same is true with soil testing."
To correct a deficiency, apply phosphorus and potassium fertilizer
according to the results of a field-calibrated soil test. Neither phosphorus nor potassium soil test
numbers change much from year to year. It takes approximately 10 to 20 pounds of P2O5
per acre above crop uptake to raise the phosphorus level reported on the soil test by one unit.
"You can build phosphorus and potassium levels in the
soil, but it is too expensive to attempt quickly," Ball said. "It is best to apply slightly
more phosphorus and potassium each year than the crop requires. In time, soil-test levels will increase."
Phosphorus and potassium fertilizers are very water-soluble.
Approximately 95 percent becomes plant-available shortly after application. Does this mean that the
plant will use all of the available phosphorus and potassium?
"No, the plant will absorb only 10 to 15 percent. The
leftover phosphorus and potassium will begin to build in the soil." Ball said.
"In wheat production, a soil-test phosphorus index of
65 and a potassium index of 250 are sufficient, which means the nutrient levels will not limit crop
performance," Ball added. "Since the soil is providing 100 percent of the crops' requirement
of these nutrients, there is no benefit in applying additional phosphorus and potassium fertilizer.
If the phosphorus index is 20 and potassium is 125, then the crop is only 80 percent sufficient, and
crop performance may be limited. In this situation, 40 pounds of P2O5 and K2O
per acre is needed to correct the nutrient deficiencies and prevent limited crop performance."
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To learn more, check out the Noble
Foundation Web site at http://www.noble.org.
More news releases available at www.noble.org/Press_Release
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