1987
DOI: 10.1080/01904168709363595
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Acid soil tolerances of two wheat cultivars related to soil Ph, KCl‐extractable aluminum and degree of aluminum saturation

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Cited by 22 publications
(5 citation statements)
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“…The cultivars of Brazilian origin (Carazinho in wheat and Saia in oats) were the most tolerant cereal species examined. The relative ranking of the cereal cultivars produced in these experiments is generally consistent qualitatively with previous assessments of AI tolerance (Foy, 1987;Foy and Brown, 1964;Foy et al, 1965;Larkin, 1987;Lafever, 1988;Taylor and Foy, 1985;Zhang and Taylor 1988). The higher A1 tolerance of Brazilian-derived cereal cultivars has been previously reported by Mugwira et al (1981).…”
Section: Resultssupporting
confidence: 76%
“…The cultivars of Brazilian origin (Carazinho in wheat and Saia in oats) were the most tolerant cereal species examined. The relative ranking of the cereal cultivars produced in these experiments is generally consistent qualitatively with previous assessments of AI tolerance (Foy, 1987;Foy and Brown, 1964;Foy et al, 1965;Larkin, 1987;Lafever, 1988;Taylor and Foy, 1985;Zhang and Taylor 1988). The higher A1 tolerance of Brazilian-derived cereal cultivars has been previously reported by Mugwira et al (1981).…”
Section: Resultssupporting
confidence: 76%
“…comm., 1980) has suggested that Al saturations greater than 60% could be considered as growth-limiting for most crops and 10 to 20% for sensitive crops. Foy (1987) found that Al tolerant BH 1146 and Al sensitive Sonora 63 wheat cultivars differed significantly in growth over a range of 36 to 82% Al saturation in a Tatum (clayey, mixed, thermic typic Hapludult) subsoil. In this instance, Al saturation was KCI AlIKCI Al plus Ca plus Mg.…”
Section: Tests For Aluminum Toxicity In Soilsmentioning
confidence: 98%
“…This approach has many variations. To be most effective, the percentage Al saturation must be applied within a rather narrowly defined set of conditions because the critical Al saturation associated with toxicity varies with soil type and with plant species and genotype (Adams et al, 1967a,b;Foy, 1987). Evans and Kamprath (1970) found that when the Al saturation reached 60% (KCI AlIKCI Al plus NH40Ac exchangeable Ca, Mg, K, and Na) the Al concentration in the soil solution was generally greater than 1 ppm, and this relationship was fairly constant for kaolinitic, mixed, and montmorillonitic mineralogies.…”
Section: Tests For Aluminum Toxicity In Soilsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…The Tatum soil used was a clayey, mixed, thermic, typic Hapludult which is used routinely to screen plants for Al tolerance (11). Chemical properties are shown in (12).…”
Section: Methodsmentioning
confidence: 99%