You are in:Home/Publications/Phosphorus and Micronutrient Interactions in soil and their Impacts on Maize Growth

Prof. Mohamed Hassan Hamza Abbas :: Publications:

Title:
Phosphorus and Micronutrient Interactions in soil and their Impacts on Maize Growth
Authors: Ihab Mohamed Farid, Reham El-Shinawy, Omar Elhussiny, Hassan Abbas, Mohamed HH Abbas, Mohamed Ahmed Bassouny
Year: 2024
Keywords: Not Available
Journal: Egyptian Journal of Soil Science
Volume: 63
Issue: 4
Pages: 405-416
Publisher: The National Information and Documentation Centre (NIDOC) affiliated to Academy of Scientific Research and Technology (ASRT)
Local/International: International
Paper Link:
Full paper Not Available
Supplementary materials Not Available
Abstract:

Iteractions among phosphorus (P) and micronutrients may greatly influence plant growth and soil productivity. Thus, a greenhouse investigation of a complete randomized design was conducted to highlight such interactions in which a clayey soil (enriched with either 5 mg Fe kg-1 soil , 1mg Mn kg-1 soil ,or 1.5 mg Zn kg-1 soil) received P in the form of calcium superphosphate at three rates equivalent to 6.7 (P1), 13.4 (P2, recommended dose) and 20.1 mg P kg-1 (P3). Then, the soil was planted with maize seeds (Zea mays L var f16) for 60 days. Our results showed that application of P3, but not P2, raised significantly the fraction of P in soil which was extracted by ammonium bicarbonate- diethylene Tri amine penta acetic acid (AB-DTPA- P) versus P1. Likewise, AB-DTPA extractable Fe and Mn increased significantly in soil with increasing the rate of applied P, while AB-DTPA extractable-Zn decreased. In P-Fe interaction experiment, increasing the dose of applied P enhanced significantly maize dry weights, although did not affect significantly their heights. This is because P applications led to significant increases in Fe and K contents within plant tissues. Regarding P-Mn interactions, application of P2 significantly raised Mn content within plants while the highest application rate of P (P3) diminished this content. In spite of that, maize dry weights seemed to be comparable between P2and P3 and both exhibited higher dry weights than P1. Finally, results of P-Zn interactions revealed that both N and Zn contents significantly increased within plants due to increasing the rate of applied P fertilizer. Accordingly, plant dry weights increased significantly. In …

Google ScholarAcdemia.eduResearch GateLinkedinFacebookTwitterGoogle PlusYoutubeWordpressInstagramMendeleyZoteroEvernoteORCIDScopus