01861naa a2200229 a 450000100080000000500110000800800410001910000200006024501320008026000090021230000160022149000250023752011530026265000150141565000130143065000090144370000180145270000160147070000200148670000220150677301030152819792972022-10-19 2013 bl uuuu u00u1 u #d1 aFRANZINI, V. I. aSelection of green manure species for efficient absorbtion of poorly-available forms of soil phosphorus.h[electronic resource] c2013 ap. 201-212. a(IAEA Tecdoc, 1721). aGreen manuring is an agronomic practice in which plants or their residues are added to the soil, improving of the soil physical, chemical and biological attributes, and increasing organic matter and fertility levels through nutrient cycling. It is estimated that green manures can increase P bioavailability. The integration of plant species in crop rotations to immobilize P is one of the most promising agronomic measures to improve the availability of P for the main crop. This study aimed to assess 21 species of green manure and a standard plant species (Lupinus albus) on their ability to absorb the available forms of P by the 32P isotopic dilution technique. It also aimed to determine if the isotopically exchangeable P, the L-values, differed when calculated with or without taking seed N into account. The results were statistically correlated and analyzed by hierarchical clustering (HCA) in order to group similar plant species. Jack bean was the most efficient species in P utilization while the Stylosanthes spp. were the most efficient in P uptake. The seed-derived P affected the P uptake efficiency evaluated by L-value technique. aAdubação aFósforo aSolo1 aMENDES, F. L.1 aMURAOKA, T.1 aSILVA, E. C. da1 aADU-GYAMFI, J. J. tIn: OPTIMIZING productivity of food crop genotypes in low nutrient soils. Vienna: FAO: IAEA, 2013.