Abstract

By using cotton cultivar CCRI-50 as material, field experiments were conducted in the summer seasons of 2013 and 2014 at the experimental station of Jiangsu Academy of Agricultural Sciences (Nanjing, China) to study the effects of different nitrogen application rates (0, 60, 120, 150, 180 and 240 kg N·hm-2) on the potassium uptake and utilization of the cotton plant that was direct-seeded after wheat harvest. Data suggested that the elevated nitrogen application rates increased the cotton potassium uptake of all growth stages, and the largest increment was observed at the peak flowering-boll opening stage. Nitrogen application also changed the uptake percentage of potassium uptake of each stage, i.e., the percentage of potassium uptake decreased in the stage from seedling to peak flowering, while increased in the stage from peak flowering to boll maturing. In addition, the elevated nitrogen applications reduced the decreasing rate of nitrogen concentration in upper fruiting branches, but promoted the decreasing rate in middle and low fruiting branches at later growth stages. As the nitrogen application rate increased, the marginal effect of potassium uptake (promoted amount of potassium uptake due to 1 kg increase of N application) increased first and then decreased, and the lint production efficiency of potassium descended steadily. In cotton plants that were direct-seeded after wheat harvest, potassium and biomass were mainly accumulated in the lower and middle fruiting branches. At the 150 and 180 kg N·hm-2 application levels, much more potassium was allocated to the reproductive organs and the characters and the eigenvalues of simulated curves of potassium concentration and total potassium accumulation were more optimized than those at the higher or the lower N application levels. At the high nitrogen application (more than 180 kg N·hm-2) level, the marginal effect of potassium uptake and lint production efficiency decreased, and at the lower nitrogen application (less than 150 kg N·hm-2) level, lint yield was lower due to the decrease of economic coefficient of biomass and potassium in the middle and low fruiting branches.

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