Considerations with soil testing in turfgrass
Author(s)
Thompson, Cole
Guertal, Elizabeth
McGroary, Pauric
Soldat, Douglas J.
Hopkins, Bryan G.
Language
EnglishAbstract
Soil testing can be a valuable method to help turfgrass managers make fertilizer decisions and choosing the most appropriate soil test extractant is key. This depends on soil properties and the availability of correlation data for turfgrass species in the desired region. This chapter describes common extracts and demonstrates their efficacy for phosphorous and potassium extraction with three soil samples from the North American Proficiency Testing program (http://www.naptprogram.org/) administered by the Soil Science Society of America. Fertilizer recommendations were made based on regional sufficiency levels from university soil-testing laboratories and the Minimum Levels for Sustainable Nutrition (MLSN) guidelines from the Asian Turfgrass Center and PACE Turf. Sufficiency Levels for Available Nutrients (SLAN) or MLSN guidelines are most appropriate for deciding how to fertilize turf. However, recommendations based on an inappropriate extractant, calibration, saturated paste extraction, or ideal ratios or of major exchangeable cations (i.e., Basic Cation Saturation Ratio) are inappropriate.
Keywords
soil testing; turfgrass; fertilizer; soil test extraction; soil test calibrationDOI
10.19103/AS.2022.0110.22ISBN
9781801465090, 9781801465090Publisher
Burleigh Dodds Science PublishingPublisher website
https://bdspublishing.com/Publication date and place
Cambridge, 2023Imprint
Burleigh Dodds Science PublishingSeries
Burleigh Dodds Series in Agricultural Science,Classification
Commercial horticulture
Agronomy and crop production
Sustainable agriculture
Agricultural science
Sedimentology and pedology