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  2002 Table of Contents

Impacts and Management of Soil Acidity under Direct Seed Systems
- Status and Effects on Crop Production

R. L Mahler
Professor of Soil Science
University of Idaho

Soil acidity has long been recognized as a primary factor affecting crop yields throughout the world. Yield reductions because of excess soil acidity occur primarily in the midwestern, southern, and eastern regions of the USA. Agricultural soils west of the Cascades in Washington and Oregon are also acid.

An acid soil has a pH below 7.0. For agricultural purposes, a soil with a pH below 6.6 is considered acid. The term acid is usually applied to the plow layer (upper 8 to 10 inches of the soil profile) and does not imply anything about the pH of the subsoil (soil below the plow layer).

Soil acidity occurs when levels of exchangeable aluminum (Al+++) and hydrogen (H+) on clay particles (cation exchange sites) in the soil are high compared to levels of calcium (Ca++), magnesium (Mg++), and potassium (K+). Excessive levels of H+ and Al+++ on clay particles in the soil have been shown to reduce wheat, alfalfa, and pea yields by more than 80 percent in parts of the USA. Application of lime to soils corrects acidity problems.

Soil pH Change in the Region

Soils in eastern Washington and northern Idaho have become increasingly acidified over the last 40 years. This acidification is due to the long-term use of high rates of ammonium-based nitrogen fertilizers. In 1960 less than 15 percent of agricultural soils (surface 12 inches) in all eastern Washington counties had soil pH values below 6.0 (Fig. 1). Between 15 and 45 percent of the agricultural soils in Kootenai, Nez Perce, Lewis, Idaho, Adams, and Valley counties in northern Idaho were less than 6.0 in 1960 while less than 15 percent of the soils were less than 6.0 in the other northern Idaho counties. By 1972, a higher percentage of soils were less than 6.0 in almost all eastern Washington and northern Idaho counties compared to 1960 (Fig. 1). By 1980, a majority of soils had pH values less than 6.0 in Whitman County, Washington and in Latah, Nez Perce, Lewis, Idaho, and Valley counties in Idaho.

Figure 1

Fig. 1. Soil pH shifts in northern Idaho and eastern Washington between 1960 and 1980.

A survey of agricultural fields in northern Idaho in 1995 found that 9 percent of fields had pH values above 6.0 (Table 1). Conversely, 21 percent of the fields had pH values less than 5.2. This 1995 survey suggested that average pH values in agricultural fields in the region have continued to decline since the 1980 survey.

Table 1

The soil pH decline since 1960 can be traced to historical nitrogen fertilizer use. As an illustration, a field on the Idaho-Washington border in a cereal-legume rotation can be used to illustrate historical N fertilizer use (Fig. 2). Prior to 1940, no commercial N fertilizer was used on the cereal crop on this field. When World War II ended, munition plants were converted to produce cheap N fertilizers resulting in N applications of about 30 lbs/acre in 1948. In the 1950s, new higher yielding varieties of wheats were introduced, which again increased N application rates up to near 60 lbs/acre by 1960. Higher yielding varieties and increased management intensity further increased N application rates up to 105 lbs/acre by 1975. Nitrogen application rates have been level for the last 25 years.

Figure 2

Fig. 2. Historical N fertilizer use on a field located on the Idaho-Washington border near Moscow, Idaho.

If you sum up the total amount of N fertilizer used on this sample field assuming that N is applied only in alternate years to the cereal crop, by 1995 over 1,800 pounds of N had been applied to this field (Fig. 3). Between 1885 (first year of agricultural production) and 1960 only 290 pounds of N had been applied to this field. Consequently, the pH value observed in 1960 was similar to the value probably observed in 1885. Between 1960 and 1980 the soil pH value on this field declined steeply as an additional 870 pounds of N was applied-nearly three times the amount of N (870 vs. 290) applied in the previous 75 years (1885-1960). Soil pH values continued to decline after 1980 as additional N was added. Consequently, it is apparent that there is a direct link between N (ammonium-based N fertilizers) and soil pH decline.

Figure 3

Fig. 3. Sum total amounts of N applied to a typical field on the Idaho-Washington border near Moscow, Idaho.

Specific Crops

The relationship of soil pH to the potential yield of crops commonly grown in northern Idaho is shown in Table 2. In general, legume crops are most sensitive to acid soil conditions while cereal and grass crops are more tolerant to low soil pH.

Table 2

Alfalfa - The minimum soil pH for maximum growth of alfalfa is 5.7. Alfalfa yields will decrease rapidly as field pH values decline. For further information, see University of Idaho Current Information Series 447, Northern Idaho Fertilizer Guide: Alfalfa.

Barley - The minimum pH value for maximum spring barley production in northern Idaho is 5.3. Research on spring barley has shown that yield declines sharply as the soil pH falls below 5.2 (Fig. 4).

Figure 4

Fig. 4. The relationship of soil pH to the percentage yield of spring barley grown in northern Idaho.

Bluegrass Seed - Bluegrass is relatively tolerant to acid soil conditions. Yield declines in this seed crop have only been observed in fields with pH values less than 5.2. Little yield data are available on soils with pH values less than 5.0. Of the crops commonly grown in northern Idaho, bluegrass appears to be the most tolerant to very acid soil conditions.

Lentils - The minimum pH value for maximum lentil production in northern Idaho is 5.65 (Fig. 5). The relationship between soil pH and yield is strong. Differences in pH tolerance among lentil varieties are not expected because, even though lentils do have a fairly wide genetic diversity, all evolution occurred in areas with high pH soils. Soil pH may affect lentils indirectly. Soil pH values less than 5.65 adversely affect Rhizobium leguminosarum. This may result in less nodulation which in turn adversely affects the nitrogen nutrition of the lentil plants. This observation has been made for other legumes.

Figure 5

Fig. 5. The relationship of soil pH to the percentage yield of lentils grown in northern Idaho.

About 57 percent of agricultural soils in northern Idaho have surface (12 inch) pH values less than 5.65. Consequently, over half of the acres annually planted to lentils in northern Idaho have pH values too low to produce maximum yields. Data plotted in Fig. 5 indicate that lentil yield will be only 79, 65, and 50 percent of maximum yield potential at soil pH values of 5.4, 5.2, and 5.0, respectively.

Peas - The minimum acceptable pH value for maximum spring pea yields was 5.52 (Fig. 6). At soil pH values of 5.3, 5.1, and 4.9, spring pea yields would be only 77, 59, and 42 percent, respectively, of maximum yield potential. About 48 percent of the acres annually planted to spring peas in northern Idaho have pH values less than the minimum acceptable value for 100 percent (maximum) yield.

Figure 6

Fig. 6. The relationship of soil pH to the percentage yield of spring peas grown in northern Idaho.

As is true with lentils, pea varieties show little difference in their response to decreasing soil pH. Since peas evolved in neutral to alkaline soils, they logically would be similar in tolerance to pH. Growers within the region have known for several years that low soil pH values reduced both spring pea and lentil yields. The low economic value of peas and lentils relative to the cereal crop in the rotation has prevented corrective action, however. Spring peas, like lentils, are legumes nodulated by R. leguminosarum. Low soil pH apparently affects the pea plant indirectly by inhibiting N2 fixation and causing inadequate N nutrition of the pea plants. Research conducted near Cavendish in Clearwater County showed that populations of nodulating bacteria are severely reduced under acid soil conditions.

Wheat - A strong relationship between soil pH and winter wheat yields was observed in field research conducted in northern Idaho (Fig. 7). The scatter in Fig. 7 can be attributed to the different winter wheat varieties used in the field experiments. The wheat varieties studied originated in different states and different soil pH environments, unlike the peas and lentils.

Figure 7

Fig. 7. The relationship of soil pH to the percentage yield of winter wheat grown in northern Idaho.

Minimum pH values for maximum winter wheat yields range between 5.1 and 5.4, depending on variety. Since the soil acidity present in northern Idaho soils developed over a long period of time as a consequence of ammonium-based N fertilizers, simple, cheap techniques to neutralize soil acidity will not work. The only way to correct a soil acidity problem is to apply some type of lime material. At least 80 percent of the soil in northern Idaho and eastern Washington (Palouse) will someday require lime to produce maximum crop yields.

Since the use of liming materials means added production costs, a crop yield loss from soil acidity of less than 20 percent may not be economical to correct. Crop prices, as well as lime material costs, will impact future crop yields produced in northern Idaho.

     
 

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