Abstract:
Separate field experiments were conducted with Russet Burbank and Kennebec potatoes on a basaltic krasnozem where tuber cadmium (Cd) responses were examined over three rates of banded phosphorus (P), supplied as double superphosphate (DSP) containing either 15 or 90 mg Cd kg-1. In both cultivars, tuber Cd concentrations increased with rate of DSP. This response was due more to the amount of P supplied in the DSP than the amount of Cd supplied in the DSP and may be a result of banded P encouraging root proliferation in the fertilizer band. Even with DSP at 15 mg Cd kg-1, Cd additions at rates of DSP needed for high yields were 6-20 times higher than corresponding rates of Cd removal in tubers. Examination of data from all studies of Cd in Russet Burbank on Tasmanian krasnozems showed a significant relationship between petiole and tuber Cd concentrations, but the estimation of a petiole concentration associated with the critical tuber Cd concentration in Australia was subject to unacceptable uncertainty due to variation between sites.