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Aluminum toxicity in corn at near neutral soil pH levels

22

Citations

38

References

1980

Year

Abstract

Abstract Aluminum toxicity to plants is often responsible for yield reductions under acid soil conditions. Despite the fact that Al becomes insoluble in the slightly acid to neutral pH range, there are indications that it can still be taken up and become toxic to plants. Corn plants were grown in the greenhouse on three highly weathered soils (Oxisol and Ultisols) containing substantial quantities of exchangeable Al. The soils were limed at various rates up to pH values near or above neutrality. On all soils a positive yield response to lime occurred at low pH values while on two of the soils, yields decreased significantly as the pH approached neutrality. Yield and Al content of the tissue were exponentially related irrespective of the level of phosphate applied (r2 = 0.34 and 0.71). The mechanism by which Al becomes increasingly available to the plant as the pH approaches neutrality is not clear and needs further investigation. Strong Al‐Mg and Al‐P antagonisms occur at the high and low pH values. The existance of Al toxicity at near‐neutral pH values can be invoked to explain many of the anomolous results reported in the literature concerning yield depressions previously ascribed a posteriori to such factors as micro‐element or P deficiencies.

References

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