Philom Bios Inc.
3935 Thatcher Avenue
Saskatoon, SK Canada
S7R 1A3
1-888-744-5662
www.philombios.com
Phosphate & Crop Production
Crops require large amounts of phosphate as the basis of a good fertility program. It is required throughout the life stages of a plant, but it is especially important for early season growth. And like most nutrients, it must be in plant-available forms so as not to be the limiting factor in plant growth. Improving phosphate efficiency is one of the keys to healthy crop production.
Phosphate is a key nutrient in the drive for higher crop yields. For example, a 150 bushel per acre corn crop takes up 75 to 110 pounds of P205 per acre. A 50 bushel crop of soybeans takes up 40 to 50 pounds of P205 per acre and a 75 bushel per acre winter wheat crop takes up 50 to 55 pounds of P205 per acre.
Phosphate is Responsible for:
Improved root growth — for greater exploration of the soil that leads to better nutrient use efficiency.
Faster emergence — to help establish yield potential.
Better stand establishment — for better crop competition and stress tolerance.
Earlier maturity — helps longer season corn and soybean hybrids yield closer to their full yield potential.
Better water use efficiency — plants can better with-stand drought stresses.
Higher crop quality — improved seed set and more uniform kernel/seed fill.
Better Legume Nodulation and Nitrogen Fixation Phosphate also plays a critical role in nitrogen fixation and enhances growth, yield and maturity in legume crops like dry beans, soybeans, peas and alfalfa. Research shows that adequate phosphate nutrition brings many benefits to legumes:
More extensive root growth — provides greater opportunity for the development of nitrogen-fixing nodules.
Faster development of active nodules — results in greater nitrogen fixation.
Phosphate and Crop Development
Yield potential will be compromised, and delays in maturity and quality can occur without adequate phosphate nutrition throughout the growing season. Most crops begin to utilize phosphate early with uptake occurring even before the plant emerges from the soil and continues throughout the growing season until maturity. For example, concentrations of phosphorus must reach 0.5% in a five-leaf corn plant or yield potential will not be fulfilled.
However, young seedlings often have difficulty obtaining adequate phosphate because of a small root system and the slow release of phosphate from cool soil. This problem is compounded when phosphate placement is limited by fertilizer toxicity in or close to the seed row.