Adaptive attributes of tropical forage species to acid soils. V. Differences in phosphorus acquisition from less available inorganic and organic sources of phosphate

Low phosphorus (P) supply is a major limitation to pasture establishment and production in highly weathered acid soils. Previous research showed that the forage legume, Arachis pintoi, was more efficient in acquiring P from infertile acid soils than the forage grass, Brachiaria dictyoneura. The main...

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Autores principales: Rao, Idupulapati M., Borrero, V., Ricaurte Oyola, José Jaumer, García, Ramiro
Formato: Journal Article
Lenguaje:Inglés
Publicado: Informa UK Limited 1999
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://hdl.handle.net/10568/77718
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author Rao, Idupulapati M.
Borrero, V.
Ricaurte Oyola, José Jaumer
García, Ramiro
author_browse Borrero, V.
García, Ramiro
Rao, Idupulapati M.
Ricaurte Oyola, José Jaumer
author_facet Rao, Idupulapati M.
Borrero, V.
Ricaurte Oyola, José Jaumer
García, Ramiro
author_sort Rao, Idupulapati M.
collection Repository of Agricultural Research Outputs (CGSpace)
description Low phosphorus (P) supply is a major limitation to pasture establishment and production in highly weathered acid soils. Previous research showed that the forage legume, Arachis pintoi, was more efficient in acquiring P from infertile acid soils than the forage grass, Brachiaria dictyoneura. The main objective of the present study was to determine whether the higher P‐uptake efficiency (defined as “milligrams of P uptake in shoot biomass per unit root length") of the legume results from its greater ability to mobilize P from less available forms of phosphate (aluminum phosphate and organic P). The grass, Brachiaria dictyoneura CIAT 6133, and the legume, Arachis pintoi CIAT 17434, were grown in the greenhouse for 75 days in monoculture or in association. They were planted in large plastic containers holding either one of two acid soils of contrasting texture (sandy or clay loam) and amended with different sources of P. Four sources of P were used: di‐calcium phosphate (Ca‐P), aluminum phosphate (Al‐P), phytic acid (organic‐P), and cow manure (dung‐P). Except for Al‐P, which was applied at two levels (20 and 100 kg P ha−1), the other sources were applied at 20 kg P ha−1. We found greater differences in P acquisition between the grass and legume than between the two types of acid soil. Acquisition of P by the legume was markedly greater than that of the grass, regardless of the source of P. The legume accessed 205 to 220% more sparingly soluble, inorganic P from soil compared to the grass. The relationship between shoot P uptake and root length showed that the legume roots acquired more P per unit root length than did the grass roots. The superior ability of the legume roots to acquire P from different P sources was associated with higher levels of inorganic P in roots. These results indicate that one reason for the success of Arachis pintoi in competing with aggressive grasses was its ability to acquire P from less available forms present in acid soils. This study also suggests that the measurement of inorganic‐P levels in roots may serve as a selection method to evaluate tropical forage legumes for their adaptation to less available P sources in P‐deficient acid soils.
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spelling CGSpace777182025-03-13T09:44:40Z Adaptive attributes of tropical forage species to acid soils. V. Differences in phosphorus acquisition from less available inorganic and organic sources of phosphate Rao, Idupulapati M. Borrero, V. Ricaurte Oyola, José Jaumer García, Ramiro feed crops acid soils brachiaria dictyoneura arachis pintoi soil fertility phosphate fertilizers soil tropical zones biomass clay soils feed legumes pastures phytic acid nutrient uptake plant nutrition mineral nutrients fertilidad del suelo suelo ácido abonos fosfatados suelo zona tropical biomasa suelo arcilloso leguminosas forrajeras Low phosphorus (P) supply is a major limitation to pasture establishment and production in highly weathered acid soils. Previous research showed that the forage legume, Arachis pintoi, was more efficient in acquiring P from infertile acid soils than the forage grass, Brachiaria dictyoneura. The main objective of the present study was to determine whether the higher P‐uptake efficiency (defined as “milligrams of P uptake in shoot biomass per unit root length") of the legume results from its greater ability to mobilize P from less available forms of phosphate (aluminum phosphate and organic P). The grass, Brachiaria dictyoneura CIAT 6133, and the legume, Arachis pintoi CIAT 17434, were grown in the greenhouse for 75 days in monoculture or in association. They were planted in large plastic containers holding either one of two acid soils of contrasting texture (sandy or clay loam) and amended with different sources of P. Four sources of P were used: di‐calcium phosphate (Ca‐P), aluminum phosphate (Al‐P), phytic acid (organic‐P), and cow manure (dung‐P). Except for Al‐P, which was applied at two levels (20 and 100 kg P ha−1), the other sources were applied at 20 kg P ha−1. We found greater differences in P acquisition between the grass and legume than between the two types of acid soil. Acquisition of P by the legume was markedly greater than that of the grass, regardless of the source of P. The legume accessed 205 to 220% more sparingly soluble, inorganic P from soil compared to the grass. The relationship between shoot P uptake and root length showed that the legume roots acquired more P per unit root length than did the grass roots. The superior ability of the legume roots to acquire P from different P sources was associated with higher levels of inorganic P in roots. These results indicate that one reason for the success of Arachis pintoi in competing with aggressive grasses was its ability to acquire P from less available forms present in acid soils. This study also suggests that the measurement of inorganic‐P levels in roots may serve as a selection method to evaluate tropical forage legumes for their adaptation to less available P sources in P‐deficient acid soils. 1999-07 2016-11-10T20:33:37Z 2016-11-10T20:33:37Z Journal Article https://hdl.handle.net/10568/77718 en Open Access Informa UK Limited Rao, Idupulapati Madhusudana; Borrero, V.; Ricaurte Oyola, Jaumer J.; García, Ramiro. 1999. Adaptive attributes of tropical forage species to acid soils. V. Differences in phosphorus acquisition from less available inorganic and organic sources of phosphate . Journal of Plant Nutrition (USA) 22(7):1175-1196.
spellingShingle feed crops
acid soils
brachiaria dictyoneura
arachis pintoi
soil fertility
phosphate fertilizers
soil
tropical zones
biomass
clay soils
feed legumes
pastures
phytic acid
nutrient uptake
plant nutrition
mineral nutrients
fertilidad del suelo
suelo ácido
abonos fosfatados
suelo
zona tropical
biomasa
suelo arcilloso
leguminosas forrajeras
Rao, Idupulapati M.
Borrero, V.
Ricaurte Oyola, José Jaumer
García, Ramiro
Adaptive attributes of tropical forage species to acid soils. V. Differences in phosphorus acquisition from less available inorganic and organic sources of phosphate
title Adaptive attributes of tropical forage species to acid soils. V. Differences in phosphorus acquisition from less available inorganic and organic sources of phosphate
title_full Adaptive attributes of tropical forage species to acid soils. V. Differences in phosphorus acquisition from less available inorganic and organic sources of phosphate
title_fullStr Adaptive attributes of tropical forage species to acid soils. V. Differences in phosphorus acquisition from less available inorganic and organic sources of phosphate
title_full_unstemmed Adaptive attributes of tropical forage species to acid soils. V. Differences in phosphorus acquisition from less available inorganic and organic sources of phosphate
title_short Adaptive attributes of tropical forage species to acid soils. V. Differences in phosphorus acquisition from less available inorganic and organic sources of phosphate
title_sort adaptive attributes of tropical forage species to acid soils v differences in phosphorus acquisition from less available inorganic and organic sources of phosphate
topic feed crops
acid soils
brachiaria dictyoneura
arachis pintoi
soil fertility
phosphate fertilizers
soil
tropical zones
biomass
clay soils
feed legumes
pastures
phytic acid
nutrient uptake
plant nutrition
mineral nutrients
fertilidad del suelo
suelo ácido
abonos fosfatados
suelo
zona tropical
biomasa
suelo arcilloso
leguminosas forrajeras
url https://hdl.handle.net/10568/77718
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AT ricaurteoyolajosejaumer adaptiveattributesoftropicalforagespeciestoacidsoilsvdifferencesinphosphorusacquisitionfromlessavailableinorganicandorganicsourcesofphosphate
AT garciaramiro adaptiveattributesoftropicalforagespeciestoacidsoilsvdifferencesinphosphorusacquisitionfromlessavailableinorganicandorganicsourcesofphosphate