Abstract
Crop growth and grain yield of narrow-leafed lupin and field pea were compared
in 40 field trials in the Western Australian wheatbelt in 1988, 1989, and
1990. Trials were arranged in clusters of 2 or 3 in close proximity, but on
contrasting soil types. This enabled seasonal effects on growth and yield to
be separated from soil type effects. Soil pH ranged from 4.1 to 5.8 at the
surface and from 3.7 to 8.4 at 50 cm, A-horizon depth from 9 cm to >70 cm,
and clay content at 50 cm from 0 to 54%. Other soil properties also
varied across wide ranges. Some soil properties were closely correlated with
one another; pH, electrical conductivity (EC), gravimetric water content
(θg) at field capacity and at wilting point, and
depth of the A-horizon were all correlated.
Narrow-leafed lupin grain yield was 2.6 times as variable between trials
within locations as field pea yield, which, on average, was 32% greater
than narrow-leafed lupin yield. The pH, EC, θg) at
field capacity, and θg) at wilting point each
explained a large proportion of lupin yield variability on their own, but
because they were closely correlated with one another, it was not possible to
determine which had the primary effect on grain yield. I believe, on the basis
of other work, that pH is an important factor in its own right. A-horizon
depth explained 9% of the lupin trial variance but this was largely due
to its correlation with pH and other related soil properties. When the effects
of these were removed, depth still reduced the between-trial variance within
locations but did not affect species differentially. Bulk density also reduced
between-trial variance within locations without affecting species
differentially. Altogether soil properties explained 42% of the lupin
site variance but none of the pea site variance.
The pH and correlated soil properties also explained much of the species site
variance in dry matter production at maturity, but not in harvest index. Bulk
density and A-horizon depth had small, but significant, effects on harvest
index. Therefore, soil type affects grain yield in these species largely
through its effect on dry matter production.
I conclude that field pea is equally well adapted to the full range of soils
in this study. Narrow-leafed lupin does not yield as well on soils with
subsoil pH greater than 6.5 as on more acid soils. The depth of the A-horizon
is only useful as a criterion for judging the suitability of a soil for
growing narrow-leafed lupin insofar as it is correlated with pH.
Subject
General Agricultural and Biological Sciences
Cited by
10 articles.
订阅此论文施引文献
订阅此论文施引文献,注册后可以免费订阅5篇论文的施引文献,订阅后可以查看论文全部施引文献