Relationships between phosphate retention,olsen and truog soil tests and the estimated short term phosphate fertiliser requirements of well established pasture
Open Access
- 1 April 1981
- journal article
- research article
- Published by Taylor & Francis in New Zealand Journal of Agricultural Research
- Vol. 24 (2) , 161-166
- https://doi.org/10.1080/00288233.1981.10420884
Abstract
Available phosphorus (QT) determined by the Truog and Olsen methods and P retention (R) were calibrated with field trials against the mean quantity of P required annually in the three years following sampling to maintain 90% of the yield obtainable with very high rates of P. The field sites fell mainly into two groups; 15 were on yellow–brown loams of the North Island with high R levels and 34 were on yellow–grey and yellow–brown earths and gley podzols in both the South and North Islands with low R levels. Most experiments with medium R values, i.e., on yellow–brown pumice soils and on mature soils derived from basalt, were excluded because of internally inconsistent results. A model in which R and QT were treated as a composite soil test accounted for 69% and 56% of the variation in P requirements for the Truog and Olsen tests respectively. Treating soils with high R as a separate group, 73% and 48% of the variation in P requirements were accounted for by the Truog and Olsen tests respectively but on soils with low R the corresponding values were only 40% and 32%. In the low R group the negative correlation between QT and P requirements was weak, partly because on many sites low QT values were associated with low P requirements. For this reason a few ‘elite’ trials rather than QT will continue to exert the major influence on P fertiliser recommendations in this group.Keywords
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