The Comparative Effects of Calcium Carbonate and of Calcium Silicate on the Yield of Sudan Grass Grown in a Ferruginous Latosol and a Hydrol Humic Latosol

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1963-06
Authors
Monteith, N.H.
Sherman, G. Donald
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Hawaii Agricultural Experiment Station, University of Hawaii
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Abstract
Several current field experiments in the Hawaiian sugar industry have shown that liming has increased both yield of sugar and phosphorus uptake by the plant. This interest led to the initiation of this study, which had as its objective a comparative study of the effects of application of calcium silicate and calcium carbonate on the growth of plants and on the availability of phosphorus when applied to a soil having aluminum oxides in a fairly good state of crystallinity against a soil in which aluminum exists in a highly hydrated colloidal oxide system.
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calcium carbonate, calcium silicate, liming, Sorghum bicolor subsp. drummondii, tropical soils, soil-plant interactions, plant nutrition, Hawaii, aluminum
Citation
Monteith NH, Sherman GD. 1963. The comparative effects of calcium carbonate and calcium silicate on the yield of sudan grass grown in a ferruginous latosol and a hydrol humic latosol. Honolulu (HI): Hawaii Agricultural Experiment Station, University of Hawaii. 39 p. (Technical Bulletin; 53)
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39 pages
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