Agronomy Journal Journal of Natural Resources and Life Sciences Education
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Published online 1 September 1968
Published in Agron J 60:464-466 (1968)
© 1968 American Society of Agronomy
677 S. Segoe Rd., Madison, WI 53711 USA
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Zinc Nutrition of Alfalfa1

Shitao Yie Lo and H. M. Reisenauer2

The influence of Zn supply on the yield and chemical composition of alfalfa grown with symbiotically fixed N or with nitrate N under conditions that provided relatively rapid or slow growth rates is reported. Nitrogen source had no effect on the relationship between relative yield and the concentration of Zn in the leaf tissues confirming the earlier conclusion that symbiotic N fixation is only indirectly influenced by the Zn nutrition of the host plant. Rate of growth influenced the level of Zn in the nutrient media required for maximum yield but did not affect the leaf Zn concentration associated with maximmn production. Top yields were obtained with leaf Zn levels greater than 6 ppm. This value is approximately one-third to one-half that required for most other crops and explains the infrequent response of alfalfa to Zn fertilization.

Observations and analyses of field grown alfalfa revealed no unusual ability of the crop to absorb or accumulate soil Zn and failed to explain the reported beneficial influences of alfalfa on the Zn nutrition of associated crops.

Key Words: Medicago sativa L • nodulation • deficiency symptoms • phosphorus


1 Contribution from Kearney Foundation of Soil Science, University of California, Davis.

2 Fulbright Scholar from Ghunghsing University, Taichung, Taiwan, China, and Research Soil Scientist, University of California, Davis 95616.

Received for publication January 12, 1968.





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Copyright © 1968 by the American Society of Agronomy.