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Mineral Nutrition of Pigeonpea

Nutrient requirements of pigeonpea are:

Fertilizers are not applied to pigeonpea in traditional systems,perhaps due to the wrong belief that it does not respond to fertilizers.
  • Low in traditional cropping systems, met from adequate nitrogen fixation, or from existing soil nutrients.
  • Intensively managed short duration cultivar will produce 2 t of grain/ha and 6 t stalks/ha ,132 kg N, 20 kg P, and 53 kg K/ha.
  • Pigeonpea seedlings depend on soil-nitrogen in its early stages. So, pigeonpea do respond to a “starter dose” of 15 to 20 kg N/ha.
  • In the later stages of plant growth, most of the nitrogen required by plants is derived from fixation in nodules.
  • P is the most frequently limiting nutrient and application of 17 to 26 kg P/ha gave higher yield than no application.
  • Deficiencies of Potassium (K), Zinc (Zn) and other elements have been recorded on some soils.
  • Zinc deficiency is corrected by applying zinc sulfate at 4 to 8 kg/ha Zn.

 

Response of pigeonpea to phosphorus

Fig. Response of pigeonpea to phosphorus

Nitrogen fixation by pigeonpea :

Nodulation in Pigeonpea
  • Pigeonpea is nodulated by rhizobia belonging to the “cowpea-miscellany”.
  • Estimates of fixed N in pigeonpea genotypes of different maturity ranged from 6 to 69 kg N he-1.
  • A long-duration pigeonpea grown in northern India could fix up to 200 kg N he-1 over a period of 40 weeks.
  • 90% of N in medium-duration pigeonpea grown as a sole crop in balck soil was derived from fixation.
Timing and Placement:
Additional nutrient requirements of ratooning and perennial pigeonpea systems need to be considered.
  • Fertilizers are usually applied to pigeonpea at sowing.
  • Placement of P fertilizer at a depth of 10 or 15 cm increased yield by 35% over broadcast application.
  • Foliar application of K is also effective.
  • Pigeonpea seedlings are prone to chloride (Cl) toxicity if muriate of potash (KCl) is placed too close to the seed row.
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