INVESTIGADORES
SAINZ ROZAS Hernan Rene
artículos
Título:
Determining Mehlich-3 and DTPA extractable soil zinc optimum economic threshold for maize
Autor/es:
MARTÍNEZ CUESTA, NICOLÁS; WYNGAARD, NICOLÁS; SAÍNZ ROZAS, HERNÁN; REUSSI CALVO, NAHUEL; CARCIOCHI, WALTER; EYHERABIDE, MERCEDES; COLAZO, JUAN CRUZ; BARRACO, MIRIAM; GUERTAL, ELIZABETH A.; BARBIERI, PABLO
Revista:
SOIL USE AND MANAGEMENT
Editorial:
WILEY-BLACKWELL PUBLISHING, INC
Referencias:
Año: 2021 vol. 37 p. 736 - 748
ISSN:
0266-0032
Resumen:
Maize (Zea mays L.) is one of the most susceptible crops to zinc (Zn) deficiency. However, in much of the world, soil Zn tests are poorly calibrated, and thus determining a critical soil test, level for Zn is challenging. The objectives of this study were to: (i) produce a field calibration of the Zn Mehlich-3 (M3-Zn) method for predicting maize grain yield response to Zn fertilizer application, (ii) compare the capacity of DTPA extractable Zn (DTPA-Zn) with M3-Zn for predicting the response of maize yield to Zn fertilizer, (iii) determine whether inclusion of soil pH, organic matter (SOM) and extractable phosphorus in a M3-Zn model improves its predictive capacity and (iv) evaluate an economic approach for determining soil Zn thresholds. We conducted 55 field experiments covering a wide range of edaphic and climatic conditions. Maize responded to Zn fertilizer in 29% of the trials. The capacity of M3-Zn and DTPA-Zn to predict relative yield of maize was similar. Inclusion of other soil variables (pH, extractable phosphorus and SOM) did not or only slightly improve the prediction of M3-Zn. Based on the relationship between M3-Zn and DTPA-Zn (R2 = 0.89), one test can be predicted from the other without affecting the calibration. The M3-Zn ´economic threshold´ ranged from 0.98 to 2.79 mg kg−1, while for DTPA-Zn it varied from 0.41 to 1.61 mg kg−1. The broad range of economic thresholds shows that differences in maize productivity and grain price between regions and seasons make establishing a single Zn threshold for all economic-productive situations inappropriate.