Publication Date:
2016-03-23
Description:
Aims Progress in improving the internal phosphorus utilisation efficiency of crops has been limited, which may be due to poor screening methods that allow differences in P uptake among genotypes grown in soil to mask genotypic differences in shoot biomass produced per unit of shoot P (PUE). We investigated alternative soil and hydroponic screening methods for their capacity to produce a consensus ranking of genotypes with regard to PUE. Methods Six rice genotypes previously identified in hydroponic screening studies as being high, intermediate or low in PUE were screened using multi P rate hydroponic and soil-based experiments. Results Comparisons made at each rate of soil-P supply produced estimates of PUE strongly biased by P uptake differences among genotypes. Using multiple-rate data to derive response functions per genotype showed that similar P content was achieved at different rates of P supply but that high-PUE genotypes clearly separated from intermediate- and low-PUE genotypes if equal P content was used. Ranking analysis suggested that results obtained from soil agreed well with those from the hydroponic study. Conclusions PUE was significantly influenced by genotype and P supply, but there was no significant genotype x P supply interaction. Hence, we conclude that screening genotypes using hydroponics at one or two P supply levels is the most cost- and time effective means to screen large numbers of rice genotypes for PUE.
Print ISSN:
0032-079X
Electronic ISSN:
1573-5036
Topics:
Agriculture, Forestry, Horticulture, Fishery, Domestic Science, Nutrition