Journal
PLANT AND SOIL
Volume 434, Issue 1-2, Pages 107-123Publisher
SPRINGER
DOI: 10.1007/s11104-018-3663-0
Keywords
Adaptation; Breeding; Nutrient uptake; Plant traits; Soil fertility; Sustainability
Categories
Funding
- National Science Foundation, Sri Lanka [NSF/AG/14/01]
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Background and aimsRice cultivars bred for fertile soils may not be the best suited to nutrient limited environments. Therefore, rice cultivars suited to sustain productivity in low-fertile soils and their adaptive mechanisms for success need to be identified.MethodsField experiments were conducted in fertile and low-fertile sites for two and five seasons, respectively, using forty four widely grown rice cultivars in Sri Lanka. Growth and tissue nitrogen (N), phosphorus (P) and potassium (K) concentrations were measured.Key resultsPlant biomass and shoot- N, P and K contents were reduced by 41, 54, 74 and 36% under low soil fertility, respectively, while crop duration was extended by 12days. Relationships between grain dry weight (DW- g plant(-1)) of a cultivar, and seed N, P and K concentrations were negative (P<0.05) at the fertile site, and this was true only for N at the low-fertile site. Seed- P and K concentrations at the low-fertile site reached to minimum and stable concentrations (1.45 and 1.61mgg(-1), respectively). Irrespective of the soil fertility status, grain DW of rice cultivars was positively correlated with shoot N, P and K contents (mg plant(-1)) and their accumulation rates (mg plant(-1)day(-1)). Moreover, grain DW of a rice cultivar at the low-fertile site could be explained by shoot P content, seed P concentration and P-harvest index through regression (R-2=0.74, significant at P<0.05). Cultivars; Bw451, Bg379-2, H4, At362, Ld408, Bg454, Bw400, At353, Bg380, At402, Bw452, Ld365, and Bw453 had higher grain DW than other cultivars at the low-fertile site.ConclusionRice cultivars with higher capacity to accumulate N, P and K (mg plant(-1)day(-1)), and longer crop duration ensured higher grain DW while seed P and K concentrations are not good indicators to select promising rice cultivars to low-fertile soils with severe P limitation.
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