Author:
Batten G. D.,Fettell N. A.,Mead J. A.,Khan M. A.
Abstract
Experiments were sown at Cowra and Condobolin to determine the effect of
sowing time (April–June) on the response to and utilisation of
phosphorus by the wheat cultivar Osprey which requires vernalisation. Crops
sown in April needed only 0–2 kg/ha of applied phosphorus to achieve
90% of the maximum yield for the site. This contrasts with crops sown
at the traditional sowing time in May–June which needed from 11.5 kg
P/ha, on a site with a moderate soil phosphorus status, to 36 kg P/ha,
on a site with a very low soil phosphorus status, to produce 90% of the
site maximum yield. Crops sown in April had higher yields and even without
applied phosphorus accumulated more phosphorus (kg/ha) than crops sown in
June with 40 kg P/ha. Crops sown in April had a lower dry matter harvest
index, a lower phosphorus harvest index, produced less grain per kilogram of
phosphorus in the shoots at maturity, and had a higher grain phosphorus
concentration than crops sown in June. Grain protein was not affected by
sowing date or the amount of phosphorus applied at sowing. At 90% of
maximum dry matter yield shoots had 0.14–0.20% phosphorus at
growth stage 30. The critical concentration of phosphorus in grain at
90% maximum grain yield increased with yield from 0.19 to 0.25%
phosphorus.
Farmers who sow wheat in April can achieve optimum yields with lower inputs of
fertiliser phosphorus. However, this benefit will be offset by a lower
phosphorus-use efficiency and more rapid depletion of phosphorus reserves from
the soil.
Subject
General Agricultural and Biological Sciences
Cited by
22 articles.
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