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ABSTRACT
Field studies were conducted on Ladino clover, orchardgrass, smooth bromegrass, and timothy. Each species was planted in a pure stand to determine its requirements with respect to P and K.
Increases of 30% to 80% in hay production were obtained when adequate K was applied. Split applications of K fertilizer were used instead of single large applications. Although the percentage P in the plant material increased with added increments of P, there was no appreciable yield response to P on most species above the lowest P rate. Phosphate needs of the crop for 3 to 4 years can be met by banding 50 to 100 pounds P2O5 per acre at seeding time.
Although liberal amounts of fertilizer potash were applied to the grasses studied there was nearly complete removal of applied K (79 to 94%). This points up the fact that it is not possible to increase the reserves of soil K when producing large yields of the forage grasses, smooth brome, orchard, or timothy on this and similar soils.
Competition for K between desirable forage species and undesirable weedy species has a pronounced influence on the longevity of the stand. By the spring of the third crop year, Ladino clover comprised less than 5% of the vegetation on low K plots. The remaining vegetation was predominantly the weedy grasses, Kentucky bluegrass, and bentgrass.
1 Contribution No. 868, Massachusetts Agricultural Experiment Station, Amherst, Mass. Presented before Division IV, Soil Science Society of America, Cincinnati, Ohio, November 19, 1952. Part of a dissertation submitted by the senior author in partial fulfillment of the requirements for the degree of doctor of philosophy, University of Massachusetts.
2 Instructor in Agronomy, Research Professor of Chemistry, and Head of Agronomy Department, University of Massachusetts, respectively.
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