Differences in root distribution, nutrient acquisition and nutrient utilization by tropical forage species grown in degraded hillside soil conditions

Low nutrient availability, especially phosphorus (P) and nitrogen (N) supply is the major limitation to forage production in acid infertile soils of the tropics. A field study was conducted at the farm ‘La Es- peranza’ located in Mondomo, Department of Cauca, in the coffee growing zone of Colombia. T...

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Autores principales: Gómez Carabali, A, Rao, Idupulapati M., Ricaurte, Jaumer
Formato: Journal Article
Lenguaje:Inglés
Publicado: 2010
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://hdl.handle.net/10568/78695
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author Gómez Carabali, A
Rao, Idupulapati M.
Ricaurte, Jaumer
author_browse Gómez Carabali, A
Rao, Idupulapati M.
Ricaurte, Jaumer
author_facet Gómez Carabali, A
Rao, Idupulapati M.
Ricaurte, Jaumer
author_sort Gómez Carabali, A
collection Repository of Agricultural Research Outputs (CGSpace)
description Low nutrient availability, especially phosphorus (P) and nitrogen (N) supply is the major limitation to forage production in acid infertile soils of the tropics. A field study was conducted at the farm ‘La Es- peranza’ located in Mondomo, Department of Cauca, in the coffee growing zone of Colombia. The main objective was to determine differences in root distribution, nutrient (N, P, K, Ca, Mg and S) acquisition and nutrient utilization of one C4 forage grass (Brachiaria dictyoneura) and two C3 forage legumes (Arachis pintoi and Centrosema macrocarpum) grown under two fertilization levels, cultivated either in monoculture or in association and harvested at four different ages.There were no significant differences in root biomass among the grass and legumes and their combinations. The native vegetation had the lowest root biomass; while the introduced grass (B. dictyoneura) had the highest root length density among all materials at all depths and ages and the native vegetation had the highest specific root length. As expected, nutrient uptake increased with age and with high fertilization in all species. Centrosema macrocarpun had the highest N and Ca uptake among all plant materials tested. Uptake of P, K and Mg was greater in the grass B. dictyoneura than in the other plant species and combination planting at all ages. On the other hand, the grass had the lowest Ca uptake. The grass and its mixture with the legumes A. pintoi and C. macrocarpun had the highest S uptake. A highly significant (p<0.001) correlation was found between root length density (depths 0-10 and 10-20 cm) and N and P uptake. Nutrient use efficiency (g of forage produced for g of nutrient uptake) increased with age until 38 weeks. At 55 weeks a sharp decline was observed in nutrient use efficiency. N, Ca and P use efficiency values were higher with the grass than with the two legumes tested. K use efficiency was similar among the three species. For Mg and S the grass had the highest values and the legume, A. pintoi the lowest.
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spelling CGSpace786952025-03-13T09:43:59Z Differences in root distribution, nutrient acquisition and nutrient utilization by tropical forage species grown in degraded hillside soil conditions Gómez Carabali, A Rao, Idupulapati M. Ricaurte, Jaumer feed crops nutrient uptake brachiaria dictyoneura centrosema macrocarpum arachis pintoi plant nutrition absorción de sustancias nutritivas nutrición de las plantas Low nutrient availability, especially phosphorus (P) and nitrogen (N) supply is the major limitation to forage production in acid infertile soils of the tropics. A field study was conducted at the farm ‘La Es- peranza’ located in Mondomo, Department of Cauca, in the coffee growing zone of Colombia. The main objective was to determine differences in root distribution, nutrient (N, P, K, Ca, Mg and S) acquisition and nutrient utilization of one C4 forage grass (Brachiaria dictyoneura) and two C3 forage legumes (Arachis pintoi and Centrosema macrocarpum) grown under two fertilization levels, cultivated either in monoculture or in association and harvested at four different ages.There were no significant differences in root biomass among the grass and legumes and their combinations. The native vegetation had the lowest root biomass; while the introduced grass (B. dictyoneura) had the highest root length density among all materials at all depths and ages and the native vegetation had the highest specific root length. As expected, nutrient uptake increased with age and with high fertilization in all species. Centrosema macrocarpun had the highest N and Ca uptake among all plant materials tested. Uptake of P, K and Mg was greater in the grass B. dictyoneura than in the other plant species and combination planting at all ages. On the other hand, the grass had the lowest Ca uptake. The grass and its mixture with the legumes A. pintoi and C. macrocarpun had the highest S uptake. A highly significant (p<0.001) correlation was found between root length density (depths 0-10 and 10-20 cm) and N and P uptake. Nutrient use efficiency (g of forage produced for g of nutrient uptake) increased with age until 38 weeks. At 55 weeks a sharp decline was observed in nutrient use efficiency. N, Ca and P use efficiency values were higher with the grass than with the two legumes tested. K use efficiency was similar among the three species. For Mg and S the grass had the highest values and the legume, A. pintoi the lowest. 2010 2017-01-12T16:37:37Z 2017-01-12T16:37:37Z Journal Article https://hdl.handle.net/10568/78695 en Open Access Gómez-Carabalí, Arnulfo; Rao, Idupulapati Madhusudana; Ricaute, Jaumer. 2010. Differences in root distribution, nutrient acquisition and nutrient utilization by tropical forage species grown in degraded hillside soil conditions. Acta Agronomica 59(4): 197-210.
spellingShingle feed crops
nutrient uptake
brachiaria dictyoneura
centrosema macrocarpum
arachis pintoi
plant nutrition
absorción de sustancias nutritivas
nutrición de las plantas
Gómez Carabali, A
Rao, Idupulapati M.
Ricaurte, Jaumer
Differences in root distribution, nutrient acquisition and nutrient utilization by tropical forage species grown in degraded hillside soil conditions
title Differences in root distribution, nutrient acquisition and nutrient utilization by tropical forage species grown in degraded hillside soil conditions
title_full Differences in root distribution, nutrient acquisition and nutrient utilization by tropical forage species grown in degraded hillside soil conditions
title_fullStr Differences in root distribution, nutrient acquisition and nutrient utilization by tropical forage species grown in degraded hillside soil conditions
title_full_unstemmed Differences in root distribution, nutrient acquisition and nutrient utilization by tropical forage species grown in degraded hillside soil conditions
title_short Differences in root distribution, nutrient acquisition and nutrient utilization by tropical forage species grown in degraded hillside soil conditions
title_sort differences in root distribution nutrient acquisition and nutrient utilization by tropical forage species grown in degraded hillside soil conditions
topic feed crops
nutrient uptake
brachiaria dictyoneura
centrosema macrocarpum
arachis pintoi
plant nutrition
absorción de sustancias nutritivas
nutrición de las plantas
url https://hdl.handle.net/10568/78695
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AT ricaurtejaumer differencesinrootdistributionnutrientacquisitionandnutrientutilizationbytropicalforagespeciesgrownindegradedhillsidesoilconditions