history of phosphorus in north carolina dr. eugene kamprath professor emeritus north carolina statue...

36
History of Phosphorus in North Carolina Dr. Eugene Kamprath Professor Emeritus North Carolina Statue University SERA 6 Meeting June 20, 2011

Upload: doreen-mclaughlin

Post on 16-Jan-2016

216 views

Category:

Documents


0 download

TRANSCRIPT

Page 1: History of Phosphorus in North Carolina Dr. Eugene Kamprath Professor Emeritus North Carolina Statue University SERA 6 Meeting June 20, 2011

History of Phosphorus in North Carolina

Dr. Eugene KamprathProfessor Emeritus

North Carolina Statue University

SERA 6 MeetingJune 20, 2011

Page 2: History of Phosphorus in North Carolina Dr. Eugene Kamprath Professor Emeritus North Carolina Statue University SERA 6 Meeting June 20, 2011

North Carolina Soils Mountain, Piedmont, Coastal Plain

Page 3: History of Phosphorus in North Carolina Dr. Eugene Kamprath Professor Emeritus North Carolina Statue University SERA 6 Meeting June 20, 2011

Norfolk- Coastal Plain Soil

fine-loamy, kaolinitic, thermic Typic KandiudultCecil / Georgeville- Piedmont Soils

fine, kaolinitic, thermic Typic Kanhapludult

Page 4: History of Phosphorus in North Carolina Dr. Eugene Kamprath Professor Emeritus North Carolina Statue University SERA 6 Meeting June 20, 2011

Phosphorus• Soils initially low in P

• Cultivated soils – buildup of P

• Piedmont soils– High buffer capacity

• Coastal plain soils– Low buffer capacity

Page 5: History of Phosphorus in North Carolina Dr. Eugene Kamprath Professor Emeritus North Carolina Statue University SERA 6 Meeting June 20, 2011

Soil Form P

----lbs/ac----Norfolk Al-P 188

Fe-P 88

Ca-P 68

Org-P 132

Georgeville Al-P 100

Fe-P 333

Ca-P 44

Org-P 164

Forms of P in NC Soils

Page 6: History of Phosphorus in North Carolina Dr. Eugene Kamprath Professor Emeritus North Carolina Statue University SERA 6 Meeting June 20, 2011

Yield (%) of Check Plots Compared to Fertilized Plots related to STP

Page 7: History of Phosphorus in North Carolina Dr. Eugene Kamprath Professor Emeritus North Carolina Statue University SERA 6 Meeting June 20, 2011

Corn Yield Increase to 22 lbs P / acre- Coastal Plain Soils

Page 8: History of Phosphorus in North Carolina Dr. Eugene Kamprath Professor Emeritus North Carolina Statue University SERA 6 Meeting June 20, 2011

Truog P- ppm P % Uptake from Days after Planting

29 Days 86 Days 102 Days

---------------------------%----------------------------

15 52 17

35 16 7

P32 Studies with Corn

P rate = 18 lbs / acre banded Nelson et al., 1948

Page 9: History of Phosphorus in North Carolina Dr. Eugene Kamprath Professor Emeritus North Carolina Statue University SERA 6 Meeting June 20, 2011

Acid % P32 Extracted

Al-P Fe-P

HCL 33 8

H2SO4 39 16

Effect of Anion on P Extraction

Seatz, 1949, Ph.D Thesis, NCSU

Page 10: History of Phosphorus in North Carolina Dr. Eugene Kamprath Professor Emeritus North Carolina Statue University SERA 6 Meeting June 20, 2011

Mehlich 1 (Double Acid)• 0.05 N HCl + 0.025 N H2SO4

• Addition of SO4 increased extraction of P from Al and FePO4

– (Seatz 1949 Ph.D. thesis- NCSU)

• Suitable for soils in the southeastern US

• Introduced in 1949

Page 11: History of Phosphorus in North Carolina Dr. Eugene Kamprath Professor Emeritus North Carolina Statue University SERA 6 Meeting June 20, 2011

Critical M1P Levels for Cecil and Norfolk Soils

Page 12: History of Phosphorus in North Carolina Dr. Eugene Kamprath Professor Emeritus North Carolina Statue University SERA 6 Meeting June 20, 2011

Critical M1P for Coastal Plain, Piedmont, and Mountain Soils

Page 13: History of Phosphorus in North Carolina Dr. Eugene Kamprath Professor Emeritus North Carolina Statue University SERA 6 Meeting June 20, 2011

P Rate Needed to Change M1Pas Influenced by Clay

Page 14: History of Phosphorus in North Carolina Dr. Eugene Kamprath Professor Emeritus North Carolina Statue University SERA 6 Meeting June 20, 2011

Critical M1P Level 3 Piedmont Ultisols

Page 15: History of Phosphorus in North Carolina Dr. Eugene Kamprath Professor Emeritus North Carolina Statue University SERA 6 Meeting June 20, 2011

Piedmont – P Relationships

• Al-P converted to Fe-P, rapid rate first 3 years after application

• M1-P highly correlated with Al-P

• Rapid decrease in M1-P first 2 years after application, followed by much slower rate of decrease

• M1-P critical level for wheat, 8 – 10 ppm

Shelton, 1960 Ph.D Thesis, NCSUShelton & Coleman, 1960

Page 16: History of Phosphorus in North Carolina Dr. Eugene Kamprath Professor Emeritus North Carolina Statue University SERA 6 Meeting June 20, 2011

Residual P – Georgeville Soil Initial P Application

(1956)M1P

(1964)Corn Yield

(1964)

---lbs/acre--- ---ppm--- Annual P- lb /acre

0 22

---bushels / acre---

0 1 27 92

150 2 64 100

300 4 89 110

600 11 114 115

Kamprath, 1967

Page 17: History of Phosphorus in North Carolina Dr. Eugene Kamprath Professor Emeritus North Carolina Statue University SERA 6 Meeting June 20, 2011

Tidewater Research Station

Page 18: History of Phosphorus in North Carolina Dr. Eugene Kamprath Professor Emeritus North Carolina Statue University SERA 6 Meeting June 20, 2011

P Management on Portsmouth Soil

• M1-P critical level for corn / soybean, 22 ppm– Long term study 1955 – 1985

• Annual band application of 16 kg/ ha (equal to P removal in grain) maintained critical level

• No yield advantage to keeping soil test above critical level • M1-P of 100 ppm supplies adequate P for 14 – 16 yrs.

McCollum, 1991

Page 19: History of Phosphorus in North Carolina Dr. Eugene Kamprath Professor Emeritus North Carolina Statue University SERA 6 Meeting June 20, 2011

Effect of P Application on Soil Solution P

Page 20: History of Phosphorus in North Carolina Dr. Eugene Kamprath Professor Emeritus North Carolina Statue University SERA 6 Meeting June 20, 2011

Effect of P Application on Soil Solution P

Page 21: History of Phosphorus in North Carolina Dr. Eugene Kamprath Professor Emeritus North Carolina Statue University SERA 6 Meeting June 20, 2011

100 % Phosphorus Saturation

Soil M1P M3P

-----------ppm-----------

Coastal Plain sandy soils 165 (275)

Piedmont clayey soils (335) 470

Page 22: History of Phosphorus in North Carolina Dr. Eugene Kamprath Professor Emeritus North Carolina Statue University SERA 6 Meeting June 20, 2011
Page 23: History of Phosphorus in North Carolina Dr. Eugene Kamprath Professor Emeritus North Carolina Statue University SERA 6 Meeting June 20, 2011
Page 24: History of Phosphorus in North Carolina Dr. Eugene Kamprath Professor Emeritus North Carolina Statue University SERA 6 Meeting June 20, 2011

Change in M1P in 3 Ulitsols14-Year Cropping with 0 P Applied

Page 25: History of Phosphorus in North Carolina Dr. Eugene Kamprath Professor Emeritus North Carolina Statue University SERA 6 Meeting June 20, 2011

Effect of P Rate on M1P

Page 26: History of Phosphorus in North Carolina Dr. Eugene Kamprath Professor Emeritus North Carolina Statue University SERA 6 Meeting June 20, 2011
Page 27: History of Phosphorus in North Carolina Dr. Eugene Kamprath Professor Emeritus North Carolina Statue University SERA 6 Meeting June 20, 2011

Effect of P Rate on M1P

Page 28: History of Phosphorus in North Carolina Dr. Eugene Kamprath Professor Emeritus North Carolina Statue University SERA 6 Meeting June 20, 2011
Page 29: History of Phosphorus in North Carolina Dr. Eugene Kamprath Professor Emeritus North Carolina Statue University SERA 6 Meeting June 20, 2011

Mehlich 3 Extractant

• NH4F, HOAc, NH4NO3, HNO3, EDTA

• pH 2.5

• Introduced in 1981

• Extracts 1.5 – 2 times more P than M1P

Page 30: History of Phosphorus in North Carolina Dr. Eugene Kamprath Professor Emeritus North Carolina Statue University SERA 6 Meeting June 20, 2011

Critical Levels Coastal Plain• Greenhouse millet

– Norfolk M1P = 31 ppm

• Field– Portsmouth corn M1P = 22 ppm– Norfolk corn M1P = 25 ppm M3P = 55 ppm– Portsmouth corn M3P = 43 ppm

wheat M3P = 64 ppmsoybean M3P = 50 ppm

– Goldsboro soybean M3P = 40 ppm

Page 31: History of Phosphorus in North Carolina Dr. Eugene Kamprath Professor Emeritus North Carolina Statue University SERA 6 Meeting June 20, 2011

Critical Levels Piedmont

• Greenhouse millet– Cecil M1P = 16 ppm– Cecil, Davidson, Georgeville M1P = 12 ppm

• Field– Davidson, corn & soybean

• M1P = 6 – 8 ppm M3P = 10 – 13 ppm

– Georgeville• Corn M1P = 8 ppm• Wheat M1P = 8 ppm

Page 32: History of Phosphorus in North Carolina Dr. Eugene Kamprath Professor Emeritus North Carolina Statue University SERA 6 Meeting June 20, 2011

P Management

• CP soil with initial M1P of 105 ppm after 14 years cropping had M1P of 60 ppm & M3P of 120 ppm – high soil test P

• CP soil with initial M1P of 50 ppm supplied adequate P for 13 years, 17 kg P/ha/yr harvested

• Piedmont soil with initial M1P of 10 ppm supplied adequate P for 12 years

• Annual P rate of 20 kg P/ha maintains critical level

Page 33: History of Phosphorus in North Carolina Dr. Eugene Kamprath Professor Emeritus North Carolina Statue University SERA 6 Meeting June 20, 2011
Page 34: History of Phosphorus in North Carolina Dr. Eugene Kamprath Professor Emeritus North Carolina Statue University SERA 6 Meeting June 20, 2011

M3P Soil Test Levels over Time

1990 2000 2010

SoilLevel Tob. Corn Pasture Tob. Corn Pasture Tob. Corn Pasture

----------------------------------------% of samples--------------------------------------------

High 23 31 21 21 37 19 23 35 17

V. High 63 32 27 70 37 53 62 35 57

Page 35: History of Phosphorus in North Carolina Dr. Eugene Kamprath Professor Emeritus North Carolina Statue University SERA 6 Meeting June 20, 2011

Effect of Clay Content on M3P

Page 36: History of Phosphorus in North Carolina Dr. Eugene Kamprath Professor Emeritus North Carolina Statue University SERA 6 Meeting June 20, 2011

P Loss Assessment Tool (PLAT)

• Environmental regulation and P loss today

• Mehlich 3 P now used as an input for this

• Historical research and data important in making decisions about PLAT and P management today