Abstract

SUMMARYIn a pot experiment providing for rapid growth of sorghum plants in the red clay loam soils of the Cotton Research Station, Namulonge, in the Buganda Province of Uganda, large yield increases were obtained from added phosphate. In an uncultivated soil which had carried undisturbed natural vegetation (Pennisetum purpureurn)for at least 10 years the response curve had negative curvature throughout. In an arable soil, yields without added phosphate were very poor and the response curve was sigmoid in form. With the arable soil, liming did not modify the form of the response curve for added phosphate but at the heaviest dressing lime decreased yield.

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