Abstract

Abstract A study was replicated in different climates [central Arizona (arid, Sonoran desert) and southwestern Georgia (humid, temperate)] to evaluate effects of controlled-release fertilizer placement in a bark-based container substrate on growth and foliar nutrient concentrations of Lagerstroemia indica L. × L. fauriei Koehne ‘Muskogee’ in large (#7) containers. Plants in Arizona were smaller with higher shoot-to-root ratios and higher levels of N, K, P, Fe, and Cu and lower levels ofCa and Zn in foliage compared with plants in Georgia. Differences in meteorological factors such as higher maximum and minimum temperatures and solar radiation, lower rainfall, and higher container root-zone temperatures, leachate electrical conductivity and nitrate concentrations were coincident with the smaller size and higher foliar nutrient concentration of Arizona plants. Fertilizer placed at the north exposure of container substrate increased plant size in Arizona. However, compared with growth of plants in Georgia, fertilizer placement at the north exposure in Arizona was not enough to entirely alleviate size inhibition caused by the arid Sonoran desert climate.

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