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Potassium uptake and requirement in organic grassland farming

A. F. Øgaard1 and S. Hansen2

Abstract
Use of mineral fertilizers is restricted in organic farming. The aim of the present paper was therefore to study whether potassium (K) limits yields in Norwegian organic grasslands.

The K status in soil and herbage on 26 organic farms was investigated, and the response to K application in six fertilization experiments was explored. Further, the relationship between soil K analyses and K release from soil was examined. K application to grassland on the investigated farms was generally low, giving negative field K balances on 23 of the farms. The soils were classified as low or intermediate in readily available K (KAL) on 23 of the farms.

The mean K concentration for herbage samples from the first cut on these farms was 18.0 g K kg−1 dry matter. In fertilization experiments, K application increased the K concentration in herbage. However, there was no significant effect on yield, even when K concentration in herbage on plots without K application was low. The lack of significant yield response to K application can be explained by low amounts of crop-available nitrogen (N). There was a tendency for increased plant uptake from reserve K with increasing values of acid soluble K (K–HNO3) in soil. Separate K analyses of timothy (Phleum pratense) and red clover (Trifolium pratense) revealed that red clover showed better competitiveness for K than timothy in leys where N supply was limited.


Source
Nutrient Cycling in Agroecosystems (2010) 87: 137-149


Author Locations and Affiliations
(1) Soil and Environment Division, Norwegian Institute for Agricultural and Environmental Research, Frederik A. Dahlsv. 20, 1432 Aas, Norway
(2) Organic Food and Farming Division, Norwegian Institute for Agricultural and Environmental Research, 6630 Tingvoll, Norway


Posted June 2010

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