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Grass production studies in the uplands of north‐east Scotland 2. The effects of fertilizer treatment
Author(s) -
RILEY H. C. F.,
MACLEOD D. A.
Publication year - 1980
Publication title -
grass and forage science
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.716
H-Index - 56
eISSN - 1365-2494
pISSN - 0142-5242
DOI - 10.1111/j.1365-2494.1980.tb01513.x
Subject(s) - fertilizer , podzol , agronomy , altitude (triangle) , yield (engineering) , productivity , environmental science , zoology , mathematics , soil water , soil science , biology , materials science , geometry , macroeconomics , economics , metallurgy
The effects of fertilizer treatment were studied over two seasons on a 2 × 2 factorial arrangement of altitude and major soil group. The soil groups were brown earths and podzols and the altitudinal zones were 260–320 m and 380–440 m. Major responses were found to N only and these were generally linear in terms of overall dry matter yield up to the highest treatment level of 176 kg ha ‐1 . Productivity on brown earths was significantly higher than on podzols and differences between soil groups were not removed by increasing fertilizer input. In most instances 88–132 kg ha ‐1 N would have to be added to podzols to achieve the same yields as on brown earths with no N input. Apparent fertilizer recoveries and responses per unit of fertilizer input did not, however, differ markedly between soil groups. Overall yields were comparable with those from lowland situations at similar levels of N input, but the growing season was short and 60–80% of production was obtained by early July.

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