Environ. Horticulture, Pears, Cherries, and Viticulture
University of California
Environ. Horticulture, Pears, Cherries, and Viticulture

The Postscript to Last Week’s Blog Article about Salt Damage

As a postscript to last week’s post regarding salt and ammonium damage to area strawberry plantings, I will outline the results of the soil samples taken from a field demonstrating the symptoms described in that article.

Steve Koike and I collected soil samples from the affected field last Thursday, January 5.  Soil samples were collected from four blocks, one of which had been overhead irrigated the day previous, and consisted of composites of at least five 5” deep samples taken from around the fertilizer band by the plant roots.

Samples were immediately taken to Soil Control Lab in Watsonville for analysis.

Results are as follows:

 

Nitrate (ppm)

Ammonium (ppm)

EC (dS/m)

Sample 1 (not overhead irrigated):

58

4.8

2.8

Sample 2 (not overhead irrigated):

72

5.2

4.2

Sample 3 (not overhead irrigated):

69

4.8

3.8

Sample 4 (overhead irrigated):

24

5.1

2.2

The results are pretty clear in showing that the block (Sample 4 ) which had been watered by overhead irrigation had three times lower nitrate concentrations and about half the EC (which is electrical conductivity, a measure of salt) of the other three averaged as a group, but more equivocal on the reduction of ammonium.

To interpret the data in the table above, we can refer to work done some time ago which demonstrated EC’s in excess of 1.0 were related to loss in yield of strawberry, suggesting that real damage could occur at the 4x levels in the table above.

Posted on Friday, January 13, 2012 at 4:22 PM
Tags: ammonium (4), EC (2), nitrate (4), salt (11), strawberry (74)

Comments:

1.
Mark: How about an update on your thinking on SWD.  
 
Thanx, JIM

Posted by Jim Stevenson on January 14, 2012 at 7:33 AM

2.
Jim, the standard recommendations are still the same on swd. We found out quite a bit more this past summer and autumn of course, but our conclusions from that work are sort of speculative and probably not appropriate yet for the blog or other venue. Email or call me and we can talk about it.  
Mark

Posted by Mark Bolda on January 14, 2012 at 12:00 PM

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