Abstract

Modern agricultural techniques have been increasing the yield of soybean (Glycine max (L.) Merr.) while also causing increasing removal of sulfur (S) from the soil. Besides this, the use of concentrated fertilizers with this element and inadequate soil management, with consequent formation of organic matter with low S concentrations, has been causing frequent symptoms of deficiency in the plants. To assess the effect of S on soybean yield and to establish critical levels of sulfur sulfate (S-SO42-) available in the soil, two experiments were conducted over a 2-year period in the Paraná State, Brazil, in fields containing Typic Haplorthox and Typic Eutrorthox soils, located in the Ponta Grossa and Londrina Counties, respectively. The experimental design was randomized blocks with five S rates (0, 25, 50, 75, and 100 kg ha−1) and four replicates. The source used was elementary S with 98 percent purity. The maximum estimated yields on average for the 2 years were obtained with application of 49.9 and 63.0 kg ha−1 in the Typic Haplorthox and Typic Eutrorthox soils, for an overall average of 56.4 kg ha−1, with concentrations of available S-SO42- in the 0- to 20-cm depth of 16.9, 19.3m and 17.1 mg kg−1, respectively, values greater than the 10 mg kg−1 indicated as the adequate concentration for soybean plant. In turn, at the 21- to 40-cm depth, the S concentrations were 49.5, 74.2, and 56.4 kg ha−1. The efficiency of the fertilization diminished with increasing S rates, in both soil types, while the greatest yield efficiency was obtained in the plants grown in the Typic Haplorthox soil.

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