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Soil sampling protocol reliably estimates preplant NO3in SDI tomatoes
Author(s) -
Cristina Lazcano,
Jordon Wade,
William R. Horwáth,
Martin Burger
Publication year - 2015
Publication title -
california agriculture
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.472
H-Index - 25
eISSN - 2160-8091
pISSN - 0008-0845
DOI - 10.3733/ca.v069n04p222
Subject(s) - environmental science , fertilizer , agronomy , nutrient , leaching (pedology) , irrigation , sowing , hectare , geostatistics , center pivot irrigation , drip irrigation , san joaquin , soil test , soil water , mathematics , spatial variability , soil science , agriculture , ecology , statistics , biology
Subsurface drip irrigation (SDI), because it can precisely deliver nutrients close to plant roots, could lead to carefully determined applications of fertilizer to meet crop needs and less risk of nitrate (NO3−) leaching to groundwater. Appropriate fertilizer applications, however, depend on an accurate assessment of the spatial distribution of the main plant macronutrients (N, P and K) in the soil profile before planting. To develop nutrient sampling guidelines, we determined the spatial distributions of preplant nitrate (NO3−), bicarbonate extractable phosphorus (Olsen-P) and exchangeable potassium (K) in the top 20 inches (50 centimeters) of subsurface drip irrigated processing tomato fields in three of the main growing regions in the Central Valley of California. Nutrient distribution varied with depth (P and K), distance from the center of the bed (NO3−) and growing region (NO3− and K). No depletion of NO3−, Olsen-P or K in the root feeding areas close to the drip tape was detected. Preplant NO3− ranged considerably, from 45 to 438 pounds N per acre (50 to 491 kilograms/hectare), the higher levels in fields with consecutive crops of tomatoes. A sampling protocol that growers could use, developed from analysis of the distribution results, provided reliable estimates of preplant NO3− as well as P and K in all surveyed fields

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