Agronomy Journal Journal of Natural Resources and Life Sciences Education
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Published online 1 November 1982
Published in Agron J 74:1050-1055 (1982)
© 1982 American Society of Agronomy
677 S. Segoe Rd., Madison, WI 53711 USA
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Effect of Liming on Potato Yields as Related to Soil pH, Al, Mn, and Ca1

W. van Lierop, T. S. Tran, G. Banville and S. Morissette2

The objective of this study was to select the most dependable soiltest criterion for determining whether potato (Solanum tuberosum L.) yields might be increased by liming soils. To achieve this end, the crop was grown in unlimed and limed treatments of eight coarsetextured soils (Spodosols), with initial pH values ranging from 4.62 to 5.02 (H2O) and 4.32 to 4.76 (0.01 M CaCl2), in a greenhouse experiment. Liming at 8 g CaCO3/8 liter soil (~= 2,000 kg/ha) increased the average tuber yield of three soils by 40%. No yield increases were, however, produced by liming soils which had pH values higher than 4.6 (0.01 M CaCl2) or 4.9 (H2O). Extractable soil Al (I N KCl) was as good an indicator as soil pH for predicting crop response to liming. Yields were generally not increased by liming when the concentration of extractable soil Al was < 0.90 meq/100 g. Manganese concentrations in soil or plants were not reliable indicators for predicting the response of this crop to liming. A relationship was found between the concentration of soil Mn extracted with either 1 N NH4OAc or 1 N KCl and the concentration of this element in plant tops (r ~= 0.75**, significant at the 0.01 level); furthermore, the concentrations of Mn extracted by these solutions were related (r = 0.92**. The Mn content in plant tops also tended to decrease exponentially as soil pH increased (R2 = 47%). Finally, no Ca-deficiencies were observed on these soils; apparently this crop can absorb sufficient Ca when soils contain as little as about 0.7 meq Ca/100 g (140 µg/g).

Key Words: Solanum tuberosum L. • Tissue Mn


1 Soil Research Service contribution no. 309, Quebec Ministry of Agriculture, Fisheries, and Food.

2 Soil scientist, Soil Research Service, 2700 Einstein Street, Ste-Foy, Quebec, Canada, GIP 3W8; soil scientist, Soil Research Service, Ste-Foy; plant pathologist, Agric. Exp. Stn., Les Buissons; and chemist, St-Lawrence Cement, Beauport, respectively.

Received for publication February 9, 1982.





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Copyright © 1982 by the American Society of Agronomy.