Response of Wheat and Barley Varieties to Phosphorus Fertilizer, 2010

Phosphorus fertilizer represents a significant portion of the cost of producing small grains. Some evidence exists that there are differences in the ability of small grain varieties to take phosphorus up from the soil and utilize this nutrient in the grain. The objective of this study is to determin...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Ottman, M. J.
Other Authors: Ottman, Michael J.
Language:en_US
Published: College of Agriculture, University of Arizona (Tucson, AZ) 2010
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/10150/279396
id ndltd-arizona.edu-oai-arizona.openrepository.com-10150-279396
record_format oai_dc
spelling ndltd-arizona.edu-oai-arizona.openrepository.com-10150-2793962015-10-23T05:04:48Z Response of Wheat and Barley Varieties to Phosphorus Fertilizer, 2010 Ottman, M. J. Ottman, Michael J. Agriculture -- Arizona Grain -- Arizona Forage plants -- Arizona Barley -- Fertilizer Wheat -- Fertilizer Phosphorus fertilizer represents a significant portion of the cost of producing small grains. Some evidence exists that there are differences in the ability of small grain varieties to take phosphorus up from the soil and utilize this nutrient in the grain. The objective of this study is to determine if barley and wheat varieties grown in Arizona differ in their response to phosphorus fertilizer. A study was conducted for the second year at the Maricopa Agricultural Center testing the response of 7 barley and 14 wheat (12 durum wheat and 2 bread wheat) varieties to 2 phosphorus rates (0 and 100 lbs P₂O₅/acre). The grain yield increase due to phosphorus application averaged across varieties in 2010 was 170 lbs/acre for barley (not statistically significant) and 545 lbs/acre for wheat. The grain yield increase averaged across varieties and years was 331 lbs/acre for barley and 577 lbs/acre for wheat. The barley and wheat varieties did not differ in their grain yield increase due to phosphorus fertilizer in 2010. However, based on 2 years of results, we were able to detect differences among wheat but not barley varieties in their response to P fertilizer. The yield response to P fertilizer (100 lbs P₂O₅/acre) among durum wheat varieties varied from 331 lbs/acre for Alamo to 1063 lbs/acre for Orita. Yecora rojo, a bread wheat, did not respond to P fertilizer. 2010-09 text Article http://hdl.handle.net/10150/279396 Forage and Grain: A College of Agriculture and Life Sciences Report en_US AZ1526 Series P-160 College of Agriculture, University of Arizona (Tucson, AZ)
collection NDLTD
language en_US
sources NDLTD
topic Agriculture -- Arizona
Grain -- Arizona
Forage plants -- Arizona
Barley -- Fertilizer
Wheat -- Fertilizer
spellingShingle Agriculture -- Arizona
Grain -- Arizona
Forage plants -- Arizona
Barley -- Fertilizer
Wheat -- Fertilizer
Ottman, M. J.
Response of Wheat and Barley Varieties to Phosphorus Fertilizer, 2010
description Phosphorus fertilizer represents a significant portion of the cost of producing small grains. Some evidence exists that there are differences in the ability of small grain varieties to take phosphorus up from the soil and utilize this nutrient in the grain. The objective of this study is to determine if barley and wheat varieties grown in Arizona differ in their response to phosphorus fertilizer. A study was conducted for the second year at the Maricopa Agricultural Center testing the response of 7 barley and 14 wheat (12 durum wheat and 2 bread wheat) varieties to 2 phosphorus rates (0 and 100 lbs P₂O₅/acre). The grain yield increase due to phosphorus application averaged across varieties in 2010 was 170 lbs/acre for barley (not statistically significant) and 545 lbs/acre for wheat. The grain yield increase averaged across varieties and years was 331 lbs/acre for barley and 577 lbs/acre for wheat. The barley and wheat varieties did not differ in their grain yield increase due to phosphorus fertilizer in 2010. However, based on 2 years of results, we were able to detect differences among wheat but not barley varieties in their response to P fertilizer. The yield response to P fertilizer (100 lbs P₂O₅/acre) among durum wheat varieties varied from 331 lbs/acre for Alamo to 1063 lbs/acre for Orita. Yecora rojo, a bread wheat, did not respond to P fertilizer.
author2 Ottman, Michael J.
author_facet Ottman, Michael J.
Ottman, M. J.
author Ottman, M. J.
author_sort Ottman, M. J.
title Response of Wheat and Barley Varieties to Phosphorus Fertilizer, 2010
title_short Response of Wheat and Barley Varieties to Phosphorus Fertilizer, 2010
title_full Response of Wheat and Barley Varieties to Phosphorus Fertilizer, 2010
title_fullStr Response of Wheat and Barley Varieties to Phosphorus Fertilizer, 2010
title_full_unstemmed Response of Wheat and Barley Varieties to Phosphorus Fertilizer, 2010
title_sort response of wheat and barley varieties to phosphorus fertilizer, 2010
publisher College of Agriculture, University of Arizona (Tucson, AZ)
publishDate 2010
url http://hdl.handle.net/10150/279396
work_keys_str_mv AT ottmanmj responseofwheatandbarleyvarietiestophosphorusfertilizer2010
_version_ 1718102747431043072