Phosphorus Requirement and Chemical Fate in Containerized Nursery Crop Production

Environmental contamination issues related to phosphorus (P) in surface waters substantiates the need to identify minimally-sufficient P fertilization amounts for production of containerized nursery crops and better understand the effect of routine amendments (i.e., dolomite [DL] and micronutrient f...

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Main Author: Shreckhise, Jacob Hamilton
Other Authors: Horticulture
Format: Others
Published: Virginia Tech 2018
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/10919/83893
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spelling ndltd-VTETD-oai-vtechworks.lib.vt.edu-10919-838932020-09-29T05:31:51Z Phosphorus Requirement and Chemical Fate in Containerized Nursery Crop Production Shreckhise, Jacob Hamilton Horticulture Owen, James Stetter Niemiera, Alexander X. Eick, Matthew J. Jackson, Brian Edward Altland, James E. orthophosphate total dissolved phosphorus particulate phosphorus pine bark dolomite dolomitic limestone micronutrients container nursery nutrient uptake efficiency fertilizer Hydrangea Ilex Rhododendron fractionation Environmental contamination issues related to phosphorus (P) in surface waters substantiates the need to identify minimally-sufficient P fertilization amounts for production of containerized nursery crops and better understand the effect of routine amendments (i.e., dolomite [DL] and micronutrient fertilizer [MF]) added to pine bark substrates on chemical fate of P fertilizer. Four studies were conducted to accomplish two overarching objectives: 1) determine the minimum P fertilization amount and corresponding pore-water P concentration needed to achieve maximal growth of common containerized nursery crops and 2) determine the effect of DL and MF amendments in pine bark on P retention during irrigation and P fractions in substrate pore-water. In a fertigation, greenhouse study, calculated lowest P-fertilizer concentration that sustained maximal growth in Hydrangea paniculata ‘Limelight’ (panicle hydrangea) and Rhododendron ‘Karen’ (azalea) was 4.7 and 2.9 mg·L⁻¹ , respectively, and shoot growth Ilex crenata ‘Helleri’ (holly) was the same when fertilized with 0.5 to 6.0 mg·L⁻¹ P. Porewater P concentrations corresponding with treatments that sustained maximal growth of panicle hydrangea, azalea and holly were as low as 0.6, 2.2 and 0.08 mg·L⁻¹ P, respectively. In a separate study, utilizing low-P controlled-release fertilizers (CRFs), shoot growth of Hydrangea macrophylla ‘P11HM-11’ (bigleaf hydrangea) produced in two ecoregions was maximal when fertilized with as little as 0.3 g CRF-P per 3.8-L container, a 50% P reduction from the industrystandard CRF. Holly required 0.2 or 0.4 g CRF-P depending on ecoregion. Mean pore-water P concentrations that corresponded with highest SDW were 0.8 and 1.2 mg·L⁻¹ for hydrangea and holly, respectively. When irrigating fallow pine bark columns containing CRF for 48 d, amending pine bark with DL and MF reduced orthophosphate-P (OP-P) leachate concentrations by ≈ 70%, most of which was retained within the substrate. In a greenhouse study, containerized Lagerstroemia ‘Natchez’ (crape myrtle) were grown for 91 d in pine bark containing CRF. In pine bark amended with DL and MF, pore-water OP-P and total P concentrations, measured approximately weekly, were reduced by, on average, 64% and 58%, respectively. Total dry weight values of plants grown with DL plus MF or MF-only were 40% higher than those grown with no amendments; however, tissue P amounts and relative P uptake efficiency were the same among plants in these three treatments. Therefore, sorption of OP-P by DL and MF reduced water-extractable OP-P but did not limit P uptake by plants. Ph. D. 2018-07-10T08:02:02Z 2018-07-10T08:02:02Z 2018-07-09 Dissertation vt_gsexam:15811 http://hdl.handle.net/10919/83893 In Copyright http://rightsstatements.org/vocab/InC/1.0/ ETD application/pdf Virginia Tech
collection NDLTD
format Others
sources NDLTD
topic orthophosphate
total dissolved phosphorus
particulate phosphorus
pine bark
dolomite
dolomitic limestone
micronutrients
container
nursery
nutrient uptake efficiency
fertilizer
Hydrangea
Ilex
Rhododendron
fractionation
spellingShingle orthophosphate
total dissolved phosphorus
particulate phosphorus
pine bark
dolomite
dolomitic limestone
micronutrients
container
nursery
nutrient uptake efficiency
fertilizer
Hydrangea
Ilex
Rhododendron
fractionation
Shreckhise, Jacob Hamilton
Phosphorus Requirement and Chemical Fate in Containerized Nursery Crop Production
description Environmental contamination issues related to phosphorus (P) in surface waters substantiates the need to identify minimally-sufficient P fertilization amounts for production of containerized nursery crops and better understand the effect of routine amendments (i.e., dolomite [DL] and micronutrient fertilizer [MF]) added to pine bark substrates on chemical fate of P fertilizer. Four studies were conducted to accomplish two overarching objectives: 1) determine the minimum P fertilization amount and corresponding pore-water P concentration needed to achieve maximal growth of common containerized nursery crops and 2) determine the effect of DL and MF amendments in pine bark on P retention during irrigation and P fractions in substrate pore-water. In a fertigation, greenhouse study, calculated lowest P-fertilizer concentration that sustained maximal growth in Hydrangea paniculata ‘Limelight’ (panicle hydrangea) and Rhododendron ‘Karen’ (azalea) was 4.7 and 2.9 mg·L⁻¹ , respectively, and shoot growth Ilex crenata ‘Helleri’ (holly) was the same when fertilized with 0.5 to 6.0 mg·L⁻¹ P. Porewater P concentrations corresponding with treatments that sustained maximal growth of panicle hydrangea, azalea and holly were as low as 0.6, 2.2 and 0.08 mg·L⁻¹ P, respectively. In a separate study, utilizing low-P controlled-release fertilizers (CRFs), shoot growth of Hydrangea macrophylla ‘P11HM-11’ (bigleaf hydrangea) produced in two ecoregions was maximal when fertilized with as little as 0.3 g CRF-P per 3.8-L container, a 50% P reduction from the industrystandard CRF. Holly required 0.2 or 0.4 g CRF-P depending on ecoregion. Mean pore-water P concentrations that corresponded with highest SDW were 0.8 and 1.2 mg·L⁻¹ for hydrangea and holly, respectively. When irrigating fallow pine bark columns containing CRF for 48 d, amending pine bark with DL and MF reduced orthophosphate-P (OP-P) leachate concentrations by ≈ 70%, most of which was retained within the substrate. In a greenhouse study, containerized Lagerstroemia ‘Natchez’ (crape myrtle) were grown for 91 d in pine bark containing CRF. In pine bark amended with DL and MF, pore-water OP-P and total P concentrations, measured approximately weekly, were reduced by, on average, 64% and 58%, respectively. Total dry weight values of plants grown with DL plus MF or MF-only were 40% higher than those grown with no amendments; however, tissue P amounts and relative P uptake efficiency were the same among plants in these three treatments. Therefore, sorption of OP-P by DL and MF reduced water-extractable OP-P but did not limit P uptake by plants. === Ph. D.
author2 Horticulture
author_facet Horticulture
Shreckhise, Jacob Hamilton
author Shreckhise, Jacob Hamilton
author_sort Shreckhise, Jacob Hamilton
title Phosphorus Requirement and Chemical Fate in Containerized Nursery Crop Production
title_short Phosphorus Requirement and Chemical Fate in Containerized Nursery Crop Production
title_full Phosphorus Requirement and Chemical Fate in Containerized Nursery Crop Production
title_fullStr Phosphorus Requirement and Chemical Fate in Containerized Nursery Crop Production
title_full_unstemmed Phosphorus Requirement and Chemical Fate in Containerized Nursery Crop Production
title_sort phosphorus requirement and chemical fate in containerized nursery crop production
publisher Virginia Tech
publishDate 2018
url http://hdl.handle.net/10919/83893
work_keys_str_mv AT shreckhisejacobhamilton phosphorusrequirementandchemicalfateincontainerizednurserycropproduction
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