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Managing phosphorus for yield and quality of sweet corn grown on high phosphorus soils of Maryland's eastern shore
Reducing P fertilization to address water quality problems has raised concerns among producers regarding crop yield and quality. A 3 yr study was conducted at three sites to examine whether reduction in P fertilization rate and/or use of a preceding rye cover crop affect the yield and quality (sugar...
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Published in: | Canadian journal of plant science 2004-07, Vol.84 (3), p.713-718 |
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Main Authors: | , , , , , |
Format: | Article |
Language: | English |
Subjects: | |
Citations: | Items that cite this one |
Online Access: | Get full text |
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Summary: | Reducing P fertilization to address water quality problems has raised concerns among producers regarding crop yield and quality. A 3 yr study was conducted at three sites to examine whether reduction in P fertilization rate and/or use of a preceding rye cover crop affect the yield and quality (sugar concentration and ear weight) of sweet corn (Zea mays L.) grown on soils with “excessive” plant-available P. The experimental design was a split plot with four replications conducted on Norfolk soils. The main plots were no cover crop and a rye cover crop. The subplots were five P fertilizer treatments ranging from 0 to 60 kg P ha
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at 15 kg P increments. With or without a preceding rye cover crop or P fertilization, postharvest soil test P (Mehlich
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) levels remained “excessive” to a depth of 40 cm. Also, yield of sweet corn was not affected by P fertilization and/or use of a preceding rye cover crop. Without cover cropping, sugar content and ear weight response to P fertilization was positive on site 2 for sugar, and on sites 2 and 3 for ear weight. Utilization of cover cropping positively influenced sweet corn sugar and ear weight sampled at early milk stage without affecting the final yield. In processing sweet corn production, profitability is determined mainly by the yield of marketable ears. Therefore, the small, inconsistent increases in sugar content and ear weight in response to P fertilization, without an increase in yield is not of a major significance to the farmer. On high P soils, P fertilization is unnecessary for the production of quality, high-yield processing corn. The use of a rye cover crop is suggested as a method of reducing the risk of P loss into the surrounding watershed. Key words: Sweet corn yield, sweet corn quality, P fertilization, rye cover crop, phosphorus management, high P soils |
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ISSN: | 0008-4220 1918-1833 |
DOI: | 10.4141/P03-095 |