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Potassium Uptake by Crops as Well as Microorganisms. In: V.S. Meena et al. (eds.), Potassium Solubilizing Microorganisms for Sustainable Agriculture

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Title Potassium Uptake by Crops as Well as Microorganisms. In: V.S. Meena et al. (eds.), Potassium Solubilizing Microorganisms for Sustainable Agriculture
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Creator M.L. Dotaniya, V.D. Meena, B.B. Basak, and Ram Swaroop Meena
 
Subject Potassium, Crops, Microorganisms
 
Description Not Available
Potassium (K) is one of the essential major plant nutrients. Its importance in agriculture has increased with intensive agriculture as well as deficiency occurring in crop plants. Global population is increasing at a quantum rate, which pushes the targeted yield to higher levels for mitigating the food demand of hungry mouths. Production of more food material from limited land is a challenge for the researcher and it aggravates nutrient deficiency, due to more uptake of plant nutrients, especially K, by high-yielding crop varieties. Among plant nutrients, deficiency of K limits the crop growth and reduces the crop yield. The source of K is native or via various replenishment paths, i.e. crop residue, microbial biomass and a range of waste materials. Researchers mentioning the wide gap between the addition of K and removal during crop production are highlighting the challenge to maintain a sustainable crop yield. The nutrient balance in the soil system is also affected by the quantity of nutrient that is taken up, raising nutrient storage in the soil–plant–microbe system, and how much is recycled by crop residues. The use of potassium-solubilizing microorganisms (KSMs) can increase the K level in the soil solution and ultimately increase plant growth and development. The main mechanisms of KSMs are acidolysis, chelation, exchange reactions, complexolysis and organic acid production in the soil. K fertilizers cost much more than other fertilizers, so use of KSMs in agricultural crop production can be a sustainable option for enhancing in situ K availability from the fixed sink of agricultural soils.
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Date 2020-05-21T09:48:46Z
2020-05-21T09:48:46Z
2016
 
Type Book chapter
 
Identifier Not Available
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http://krishi.icar.gov.in/jspui/handle/123456789/36047
 
Language English
 
Relation Not Available;
 
Publisher Springer