Abstract

Five soil boron (B) extraction methods were evaluated for their ability to predict available B to kiwifruit plants in soils with high B concentration. The methods were hot water soluble (Hws‐B), 0.05M mannitol in 0.01M calcium chloride (CaCl2 extractable (Man‐B), 0.05M hydrochloride acid (HCl) soluble (HC1‐B), resin extractable (Resin‐B), and saturation extract (Sat‐B). The amounts of B recovered by the first four methods investigated were strongly correlated with each other, the highest correlation obtained being between Hws‐B and HC1‐B. Plant B was highly correlated to the B recovered by the first four extractants and poorly correlated to the B determined by the saturation method. Soil B concentrations corresponding with B toxicity in kiwifruit are 0.51, 0.80, 0.18, and 2.0 μg‐g‐1 soil for Hws‐B, Man‐B, HC1‐B, and Res‐B, respectively. The coefficients of determination in some cases were improved when in the regression equations, soil pH and clay content were included.

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