Full TGIF Record # 290367
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Web URL(s):https://scisoc.confex.com/crops/2017am/webprogram/Paper106053.html
    Last checked: 10/13/2017
Publication Type:
i
Report
Content Type:Abstract or Summary only
Author(s):Bier, Peter; Soldat, Douglas J.; Koch, Paul L.
Author Affiliation:Bier: CPT, United States Military Academy, West Point, NY; Soldat: Ph.D. and University of Wisconsin-Madison, Madison, WI; Koch: Plant Pathology, University of Wisconsin-Madison, Madison, WI
Title:The effects of potassium fertilization and sand topdressing on creeping bentgrass
Section:C05 Turfgrass Science
Other records with the "C05 Turfgrass Science" Section

Turf management and ecology (includes student competition)
Other records with the "Turf management and ecology (includes student competition)" Section
Meeting Info.:Tampa, Florida: October 22-25, 2017
Source:ASA, CSSA and SSSA International Annual Meetings. 2017, p. 106053.
Publishing Information:[Milwaukee, Wisconsin]: [American Society of Agronomy and the Entomological Society of America]
# of Pages:1
Keywords:TIC Keywords: Agrostis stolonifera; Disease incidence; Golf greens; Growth analysis; Potassium fertilizers; Putting quality; Sand topdressings
Abstract/Contents:"Turfgrass managers often apply large doses of potassium (>300 kg K2O ha-1 yr-1) to putting greens. The conventional wisdom is that high levels of potassium confer stress tolerances to the plant. However, potassium applications have been associated with increased winter diseases. The objective of this long-term research project was to evaluate putting green quality, growth, and disease incidence over a range of soil and tissue potassium levels. This project was initiated in 2011 on a USGA putting green with 'A4' creeping bentgrass (Agrostis stolonifera L.). The experiment was a randomized complete block design with four replications. The treatments included four levels of liquid potassium sulfate, ranging from 0 to 300 kg K2O ha-1 yr-1 and one level of granular gypsum at a rate of 100 kg Ca ha-1 yr-1. There were no significant differences in chlorophyll index, visual turfgrass quality, or clipping yield due to treatment over the entire course of the research. Tissue K, exchangeable soil K, and Michrodochium patch infection were all significantly affected by treatment over the six-year study, with high-K treatments being significantly higher in all three instances. Turfgrass removed a greater amount of K through daily clipping collection than was available in the exchangeable K pool identified by Mehlich-3 and 1 M HNO3 testing. This indicates K was becoming plant-available from a non-exchangeable pool. Hence, traditional soil testing methods may be inadequate for determining plant-available K in sand-based root zones. Total soil K analysis of the 0-K treatment indicated an increase in soil K during the six-year study. With top-dressing sand being the only input on this treatment, the increase in potassium was likely from the weathering of potassium feldspar, a mineral commonly found in sand. The potassium derived from the sand was in sufficient levels to compensate for the lack of K fertilizer."
Language:English
References:0
Note:This item is an abstract only!
"105-5"
ASA/CSSA/SSSA Citation (Crop Science-Like - may be incomplete):
Bier, P., D. J. Soldat, and P. L. Koch. 2017. The effects of potassium fertilization and sand topdressing on creeping bentgrass. Agron. Abr. p. 106053.
Fastlink to access this record outside TGIF: https://tic.msu.edu/tgif/flink?recno=290367
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    Last checked: 10/13/2017
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