Revista Brasileira de Ciência do Solo (Apr 2011)

Soil phosphorus dynamics and availability and irrigated coffee yield

  • Thiago Henrique Pereira Reis,
  • Paulo Tácito Gontijo Guimarães,
  • Antônio Eduardo Furtini Neto,
  • Antônio Fernando Guerra,
  • Nilton Curi

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1590/S0100-06832011000200019
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 35, no. 2
pp. 503 – 515

Abstract

Read online

Research data have demonstrated that the P demand of coffee (Coffea arabica L.) is similar to that of short-cycle crops. In this context, the objective of this study was to evaluate the influence of annual P fertilization on the soil P status by the quantification of labile, moderately labile, low-labile, and total P fractions, associating them to coffee yield. The experiment was installed in a typical dystrophic Red Latosol (Oxisol) cultivated with irrigated coffee annually fertilized with triple superphosphate at rates of 0, 50, 100, 200, and 400 kg ha-1 P2O5. Phosphorus fractions were determined in two soil layers: 0-10 and 10-20 cm. The P leaf contents and coffee yield in 2008 were also evaluated. The irrigated coffee responded to phosphate fertilization in the production phase with gains of up to 138 % in coffee yield by the application of 400 kg ha-1 P2O5. Coffee leaf P contents increased with P applications and stabilized around 1.98 g kg-1, at rates of 270 kg ha-1 P2O5 and higher. Soil P application caused, in general, an increase in bioavailable P fractions, which constitute the main soil P reservoir.

Keywords