Author:
Singh D. K.,Sale P. W. G.
Abstract
A glasshouse experiment was carried out to determine how an increasing P
supply influences the growth and survival of white clover plants subjected to
a range of defoliation frequencies. Treatments involved the factorial
combination of P application rate (0, 30, 90, and 180 mg/pot) to a
P-deficient Krasnozem soil and defoliation frequency (1, 2, or 4 defoliations
over 36 days). The survival of P-deficient plants was threatened by the most
frequent defoliation; their leaf area declined owing to a reduction in leaf
number and individual leaf size with each successive defoliation. Increasing
the P supply to 180 mg/pot reversed this downward trend as the high P
plants were able to maintain leaf area by increasing leaf size and number.
Increasing the frequency from 1 to 4 defoliations over the 36 days also
changed the form of the leaf dry matter response to added P, from an
asymptotic to a linear response. The P requirement of white clover for maximum
leaf yield therefore increased under frequent defoliation. This effect was
also apparent for a range of morphological measurements including stolon
elongation rate, leaf area, root mass, leaf number, and stolon number, where
the magnitude of the P response was consistently greater for frequently
defoliated plants. Exceptions included stolon mass, which responded more to P
addition under infrequent defoliation.
Subject
General Agricultural and Biological Sciences
Cited by
16 articles.
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