Scientia Agricola (Oct 2011)

Carbonate-silicate ratio for soil correction and influence on nutrition, biomass production and quality of palisade grass

  • Renato Ferreira de Souza,
  • Fabrício William Ávila,
  • Valdemar Faquin,
  • Adélia Aziz Alexandre Pozza,
  • Janice Guedes Carvalho,
  • Antônio Ricardo Evangelista

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1590/S0103-90162011000500003
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 68, no. 5
pp. 526 – 534

Abstract

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Silicates can be used as soil correctives, with the advantage of being a source of silicon, a beneficial element to the grasses. However, high concentrations of silicon in the plant would affect the digestibility of the forage. To evaluate the influence of the substitution of the calcium carbonate by calcium silicate on the nutrition, biomass production and the feed quality of the palisade grass [Urochloa brizantha (C. Hochstetter ex A. Rich.) R. Webster], three greenhouse experiments were conducted in completely randomized designs with four replications. Experimental units (pots) contained a clayey dystrophic Rhodic Haplustox, a sandy clay loam dystrophic Typic Haplustox and a sandy loam dystrophic Typic Haplustox. Each soil received substitution proportions (0, 25, 50, 75 and 100 %) of the carbonate by calcium silicate. The increase in the proportion of calcium silicate elevated the concentrations and accumulations of Si, Ca, Mg, and B, reduced Zn and did not alter P in the shoot of plants. The effects of the treatments on the other nutrients were influenced by the soil type. Inclusion of calcium silicate also increased the relative nutritional value and the digestibility and ingestion of the forage, while the concentration and accumulation of crude protein and the neutral detergent and acid detergent fibers decreased. Biomass production and feed quality of the palisade grass were generally higher with the 50 % calcium silicate treatment.

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