Author:
Simpson P. G.,McLaughlin M. J.,Weatherley A. J.,Sale P. W. G.,Hoy V.,Lancaster P.
Abstract
Summary. A selection of commonly used soil phosphorus
(P) tests, which included anion and cation exchange resin membranes, were
compared in a glasshouse experiment using subterranean clover, and evaluated
in the field at 19 sites from the National Reactive Phosphate Rock Project in
1993 and at 6 sites in 1995. The ability of the soil P tests to predict plant
response was used to evaluate the tests. In the glasshouse experiment the
resin test was less effective than the Bray 1 and Colwell tests in its ability
to assess the level of plant-available P from the different fertiliser
treatments. Seventy-one percent of the variation in total P content of the
subterranean clover shoots was explained by resin-extractable P values,
whereas the Colwell procedure accounted for 81% and the Bray 1
procedure accounted for 78%. Water and CaCl2
extracts were poor predictors of P content. In the field experiments all tests
evaluated performed poorly in describing the relationship between soil test P
and the level of P applied and relative yield and soil test P over a wide
range of soil types and environments. The Bray 1 procedure performed best but
the relationship was poor.
Subject
General Agricultural and Biological Sciences
Cited by
2 articles.
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