Publication | Open Access
Managing Phosphorus for Citrus Yield and Fruit Quality in Developing Orchards
21
Citations
8
References
2008
Year
Florida Citrus FertilizationBotanySustainable AgricultureAgricultural EconomicsFruit QualityDeveloping OrchardsP FertilizerP Fertilizer RatePublic HealthCitrus YieldSoil FertilityHorticultural ScienceNutrient Management
No calibrated phosphorus (P) soil test exists to guide Florida citrus fertilization. Applying P fertilizer to citrus when it is not needed is wasteful and may cause undesirable P enrichment of adjacent surface water. The objective of this study was to establish guidelines for P management in developing Florida grapefruit ( Citrus paradisi Macf.) and orange ( Citrus sinensis L. Osb.) orchards by determining the effect of P fertilizer rate on soil test P and subsequently calibrating a P soil test for citrus yield and fresh fruit quality. Two orchards were planted on sandy soil with 3 mg·kg −1 (very low) Mehlich 1 soil test P. In Years 1 through 3, P fertilization increased soil test P up to 102 mg·kg −1 (very high). In Years 4 through 7, canopy volume, yield, and fruit quality did not respond to available soil P as indexed by soil testing. As tree size and fruit production increased, leaf P was below optimum where soil test P was below 13 mg·kg −1 (grapefruit) or 31 mg·kg −1 (oranges). Total P in the native soil at planting was ≈42 mg·kg −1 , which was apparently available enough to support maximum tree growth, fruit yield, and fruit quality for the first 7 years after planting. Trees were highly efficient in taking up P from a soil considered very low in available P. Citrus producers can likely refrain from applying P fertilizer to young trees on Florida sandy soils if soil test P is very high or high and probably medium as well.
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