Plant growth with nutrient solutions. IV. The influence of culture solutions of varying phosphate content on the growth of the turnip in fen and gravel soil.
- 1 July 1947
- journal article
- research article
- Published by Cambridge University Press (CUP) in The Journal of Agricultural Science
- Vol. 37 (3) , 163-198
- https://doi.org/10.1017/s0021859600007437
Abstract
Statistical experiments were made to ascertain the effect of variations in applied soluble phosphate on the growth of Milan Strap-leaved Purple Top Turnips in a light gravel soil already containing sufficient available phosphate, and in a fen soil possessing an inadequate supply of available phosphate, as aggregates for growth.No adverse effect on yield, calculated as fresh or dry matter of tops, roots, or whole plants, was suffered in either soil at any of the stages of growth considered at the highest concentrations of soluble phosphate, unlike the behaviour of this turnip when grown in a pure sand containing no clays or humates, where there was a narrow optimum range of phosphorus at a low concentration. The gravel soil occupied an intermediate position, however, between sand with its low optimum range of soluble phosphorus, and fen soil, where positive response to increasing concentrations of soluble phosphorus approached the ‘normal’, and thus there was a range of phosphorus at low concentration tending to a maximum yield followed generally by a greater numerical yield at the highest concentrations of phosphorus.At the seedling stage in gravel soil variation in applied phosphate had absolutely no statistical effect on yield, moisture content of tops, roots and whole plants, and the ratios, for fresh or dry matter, Top/Root, Root/(Whole plant) and (Whole plant)/ Top.This publication has 11 references indexed in Scilit:
- Plant growth with nutrient solutions: III. A comparison of sand and soil as the aggregate for plant growth, using an optimum nutrient solution with the sand, and incomplete supplies of nutrients with ‘once-used‘ soilThe Journal of Agricultural Science, 1946
- Plant growth with nutrient solutions: II. A comparison of pure sand and fresh soil as the aggregate for plant growthThe Journal of Agricultural Science, 1946
- The Physiology of Plant Growth with Special Reference to the Concept of Net Assimilation RateAnnals of Botany, 1946
- The nutrition of the carrot: III. Grown in a gravel soilThe Journal of Agricultural Science, 1946
- The response of the carrot to water supply and fertilizer on a gravel soilThe Journal of Agricultural Science, 1944
- The nutrition of vegetables in sandAnnals of Applied Biology, 1944
- The nutrition of the radishAnnals of Applied Biology, 1943
- The nutrition of the carrotAnnals of Applied Biology, 1943
- THE NUTRITION OF TURNIPSAnnals of Applied Biology, 1941
- THE INFLUENCE OF AMMONIUM SULFATE ON THE GERMINATION AND THE GROWTH OF BARLEY IN SAND AND SOIL CULTURES KEPT AT DIFFERENT MOISTURE CONTENTS AND AT VARIOUS OSMOTIC CONCENTRATIONS OF THE SOIL SOLUTIONSoil Science, 1918