Abstract
Florida sandy soils, particularly, Entisols are low in boron (B) and occasionally have B deficiency for citrus. A study was set-up at Citrus Research and Education Center, Lake Alfred, Florida, on a Candler fine sand to determine the availability and uptake of B in a high-density citrus planting of Huanglongbing (HLB)-affected trees. Boron was applied at 1.12 kg ha−1 in three splits, at University of Florida Institute of Food and Agricultural Sciences (UF/IFAS) recommended rate (1×), and at 2× the recommended rate using foliar and soil application methods. Soil samples were taken from soil surface to 60 cm depth in 15-cm increments within the irrigated and non-irrigated zones. Soil and leaf samples were analyzed for B using Mehlich III extraction method and acid digestion, respectively. Results showed the leaf B concentration for soil applied rate 1× was significantly higher (P < 0.001) than that of foliar applied either at single or double rate but both were in the optimum range recommended by UF/IFAS. The sorption study revealed that there was no sorption (KD < 0.2 L kg−1) but KD at 0–15-cm depth was 3× greater than that at 15–60 cm depths. The concentration of B in the leaf tissue remained in the recommended optimum critical range. Sorption coefficients showed negligible B sorption which means most applied B would be prone to leaching under heavy rains or saturated soil conditions on Florida sandy soils thus requiring judicious management for optimizing tree performance and sustaining environmental quality.
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