Abstract

Growers rely on nutrient sufficiency ranges (NSRs) after plant tissue analysis to inform timely nutrient management decisions. The NSRs are typically established from survey studies across multiple locations, which could be confounded by several abiotic and biotic factors. We conducted field studies in 2020, 2021, and 2022 to validate the lower thresholds of the NSRs for corn (Zea mays) at the early growth stage as reported in the Southern Cooperative Series Bulletin #394. We induced various corn nutritional levels by making different nutrient application rates. If the NSRs are valid, samples within the same replication that satisfy the NSRs of all nutrients should have similar biomass accumulation. The results showed that the NSRs were not valid under the conditions tested. In total, 47.6% of the samples satisfied all the lower thresholds of the NSRs, and 25.4% of those samples had relative biomass <50%, with relative biomass even as low as 24.2% observed. Moreover, 9.6% of the total samples had P and Cu levels that failed to meet the lower threshold but still had relative biomass ≥75%. The findings highlight the sensitivity of corn to nutrient imbalance and the need to optimize nutrient diagnostic methods at the early growth stage.

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