Publication | Open Access
Effect of Postharvest Soil and Foliar Application of Boron Fertilizer on the Partitioning of Boron in Apple Trees
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Citations
19
References
2005
Year
Postharvest Foliar BEngineeringBotanyEm 9Sustainable AgricultureAgricultural EconomicsTree GrowthBoron FertilizerPlant NutritionFruit SciencePostharvest SoilPost-harvest PhysiologyHorticultural PlantRipeningApple TreesPlant PhysiologyHorticultural Science
This study was carried out on mature `Delicious' apple trees ( Malus domestica Borkh.) on EM 9 rootstock. Labeled B (99.63 Atom % 10 B) was applied as boric acid. Treatments were postharvest foliar B at 375 mg·L –1 , postharvest foliar B (375 mg·L –1 ) plus urea (2.5% wt/vol), and a soil application at the same per-tree rate as the foliar treatments (16 g boric acid/tree). Postharvest foliar B applied with or without urea was efficiently transported from the leaves into storage tissues for the next year's growth. However, soil-applied B remained mostly in the roots while very little was translocated to the above-ground portions of the tree at full bloom. When urea was added to a foliar B spray, the amount of B in the roots and flower clusters increased at full bloom. Although increasing the efficiency of foliar B applications may not be necessary, combining urea and B into a single application is recommended when growers want to apply both N and B. Shoot leaves from all treatments collected late in the season (midsummer) had similar B concentrations, even though treatments altered the amount of added B that was present in different tree tissues early in the season.
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