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Applications of AMS 14C Measurements in Environmental and Economical Problems
Phosphate Fertilization and Mycorrhizal Inoculation Increase Corn Leaf and Grain Nutrient Contents
The agricultural use of arbuscular mycorrhizal fungi, such as Rhizoglomus intraradices, can
increase the efficiency of phosphate fertilization for the benefit of the corn plant and grain nutrition.
In this study, a field experiment was conducted in an area of Selvíria/MS, Brazil, in the years 2019
and 2020, to verify the effects of reduced doses of phosphorus combined with the inoculation of
corn seed with R. intraradices on corn plant growth and grain nutrient contents. The experiment was
laid in a randomized block design in subdivided plots with four repetitions and twenty treatments
resulting from combining five doses of P2O5 (0%, 25%, 50%, 75%, and 100% of the recommended
dose) with four doses (0, 60, 120, and 180 g ha1) of an inoculant containing R. intraradices. Leaf
and kernel macro- and micronutrient contents were evaluated. The foliar P content in 2020 was a
function of the interaction between phosphate fertilization and AMF inoculation, with the highest
leaf P content observed at the 100% of P2O5 combined with AMF inoculation between 120 and 140 g
ha1. In the grains Mg content, an interaction was observed between the two factors in 2020 and
the response surface, showing that the highest Mg content was obtained when maximum doses of
P2O5 and maximum doses of inoculant were combined. A response surface showed that, in 2020,
the highest leaf Zn content occurred when 35–55% P2O5 is applied with no inoculation and when
P2O5 is limited to 20–30%, and there is inoculation with doses between 90 and 150 g ha1. Phosphate
fertilization increased foliar K (2019) and Mg (2020) contents, with maximum points at doses of
76.57% and 88.80%, respectivelyinfo:eu-repo/semantics/publishedVersio