Arsenic ? phosphorus interactions on corn 1
- 1 March 1970
- journal article
- research article
- Published by Taylor & Francis in Communications in Soil Science and Plant Analysis
- Vol. 1 (2), 85-93
- https://doi.org/10.1080/00103627009366245
Abstract
Samples of two widely divergent soils, a Waupun silt loam and a Plainfield sand, deficient in P, were treated with 0, 20 or 80 ppm As and 0, 50, 100 or 300 ppm P in all possible combinations and cropped twice for 40 days to corn in the greenhouse. Arsenic had a much more pronounced toxicity to corn in the sand than on the silt loam. At the 80 ppm As level, P had little effect on As toxicity with the silt loam but enhanced toxicity with the sand and increasing rates of P increased As uptake by corn. At the 20 ppm As level, P did not affect As toxicity or uptake. Soil As extracted by N NH4OAc (pH 7.0) decreased with time but increased with increasing levels of applied P. Bray Pl extractable As was not greatly affected by applied P or time, and appeared to be a more suitable “available”; soil As test. From the results obtained, it would appear that P applications are not the solution to an As toxicity problem.Keywords
This publication has 3 references indexed in Scilit:
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- EFFECT OF SEASON, PHOSPHATE, AND ACIDITY ON PLANT GROWTH IN ARSENIC-TOXIC SOILSSoil Science, 1953
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