Plant Nutrition
Plant Nutrition
Plant Nutrition
Essential Elements
called mineral nutrients Plant Nutrients Macronutrients Micronutrients required for a plant to complete its life cycle extracted from the soil in the form of inorganic ions
Macronutrients
Nitrogen Phosphorus Potassium Magnesium Sulfur Calcium Iron Manganese Zinc Copper Boron Molybdenum Chlorine N P K Mg S Ca Fe Mn Zn Cu B Mo Cl 14.01 30.98 39.10 24.32 32.07 40.08 55.85 54.94 65.38 63.54 10.82 95.95 35.46 NO3-, NH4+ PO43-, HPO42-, H2PO4K+ Mg2+ SO42Ca2+ Fe2+, Fe3+ Mn2+ Zn2+ Cu2+ BO32-, B4O72MoO42Cl4.0 0.5 4.0 % 0.5 0.5 1.0 % % % % %
Micronutrients
200 ppm 200 ppm 30 ppm 10 ppm 60 ppm 2 ppm 3000 ppm
Plant tissues also contain other elements (Na, Se, Co, Si, Rb, Sr, F, I) which are not needed for the normal growth and development.
A. Nitrogen (N)
1) Soil Nitrogen Cycle a) Nitrogen Fixation
-Transformation of atmospheric N to nitrogen forms available to plants - Mediated by N-fixing bacteria: Rhizobium (symbiotic) found in legumes (bean, soybean) Azotobacter (non-symbiotic bacteria)
b) Soil Nitrification
- Decomposition of organic matter into ammonium and nitrate - Mediated by ammonifying and nitrifying bacteria
Plant residue
(Protein, aa, etc)
NH4+
Ammonium
NO2
Nitrite
NO3Nitrate
2) N Functions in Plants
- Component of proteins, enzymes, amino acids, nucleic acids, chlorophyll - C/N ratio (Carbohydrate: Nitrogen ratio) High C/N ratio Plants become more reproductive Low C/N ratio Plants become more vegetative - Transamination NO3NH2 Glutamic acid Other amino acids (a. a.) Protein
Enzymes
B. Phosphorus (P)
1) Soil Relations
- Mineral apatite [Ca5F(PO4)3] - Relatively stable in soil - Has a low mobility (top dressing not effective)
2) Plant Functions
- Component of nucleic acid (DNA, RNA), phospholipids, coenzymes, high-energy phosphate bonds (ADP, ATP) high- Seeds are high in P
4) Fertilizers
- Superphosphates (may contain F) Single superphosphate (8.6% P): CaH4(PO4)2 Triple superphosphate (20% P): CaH4(PO4)2 - Ammonium phosphate: (NH4)2PO4, NH4HPO4 - Bone meal - Available forms: PO43-, HPO42-, H2PO4P absorption influenced by pH
2) Plant Functions
- Activator of many enzymes - Regulation of water movement across membranes and through stomata (Guard cell functions)
4) Fertilizers
- Potassium chloride (KCl)- murate of potash (KCl)- Potassium sulfate (K2SO4) - Potassium nitrate (KNO3)
Control
D. Calcium (Ca)
1) Soil Relations
soils) - Present in large quantities in earths surface (~1% in US top soils) - Influences availability of other ions from soil
2) Plant Functions
- Component of cell wall - Involved in cell membrane function - Largely present as calcium pectate in meddle lamela Calcium pectate is immobile in plant tissues
4) Fertilizers
- Agricultural meal (finely ground CaCO3MgCO3) - Lime (CaCO3), Gypsum (CaSO4) (CaCO - Superphosphate - Bone meal-organic P source meal-
Right- Hydroponic tomatoes grown in the greenhouse, Left-Blossom end rot of tomato fruits induced by calcium (Ca++) deficiency
2) Plant Functions
- Component of amino acids (methionine, cysteine) - Constituent of coenzymes and vitamins - Responsible for pungency and flavbor (onion, garlic, mustard) (onion, mustard)
4) Fertilizers
- Gypsum (CaSO4) (CaSO - Magnesium sulfate (MgSO4) (MgSO - Ammonium sulfate [(NH4)2SO4] - Elemental sulfur (S) (S
2) Plant Functions
- Core component of chlorophyll molecule - Catalyst for certain enzyme activity
4) Fertilizers
- Dolomite (mixture of CaCO3MgCO3) - Epsom salt (MgSO4) (MgSO - Magnesium nitrate [Mg(NO3)2] - Magnesium sulfate (MgSO4)
Micronutrients
Micronutrient elements
Iron (Fe) Manganese (Mn) Boron (B) Zinc (Zn) Molybdenum (Mo) Copper (Cu) Chlorine (Cl)
Usually supplied by irrigation water and soil Deficiency and toxicity occur at pH extremes
2) Lower soil pH
Iron is in more useful form (Fe2+) (Fe
B. Manganese (Mn)
- Required for chlorophyll synthesis, O2 evolution during photosynthesis - Activates some enzyme systems - Deficiency: Mottled chlorsis between main veins of new leaves (Mn is immobile), similar to Fe chlorosis immobile), - Toxicity: Chlorosis on new growth with small, numerous dark spots Deficiency occurs at high pH Toxicity occurs at low pH - Fertilizers: Manganese sulfate (MnSO4) Mn EDTA (chelate) for high pH soils
C. Boron (B)
- Involved in carbohydrate metabolism - Essential for flowering, pollen germination, N metabolism - Deficiency: New growth distorted and malformed, flowering and fruit set depressed, roots tubers distorted - Toxicity: Twig die back, fruit splitting, leaf edge burns - Fertilizers: Borax (Na2B4O710H2O), calcium borate (NaB4O7 4H2O)
D. Zinc (Zn)
- Involved in protein synthesis, IAA synthesis - Deficiency: (occurs in calcarious soil and high pH) (occurs pH) Growth suppression, reduced internode lengths, rosetting, tissues) interveinal chlorosis on young leaves (Zn is immobile in tissues) (Zn pH) - Toxicity: (occurs at low pH) Growth reduction, leaf chlorosis (occurs
Fe Mn Mo Zn
0.25 0.5
Cont
1 2 3 Concentration (mM)
E. Copper (Cu) - Essential component of several enzymes of chlorophyll synthesis, carbohydrate metabolism - Deficiency: Rosette or witchs broom - Toxicity: Chlorosis - Fertilizers: Copper sulfate (CuSO4)
F. Chlorine (Cl) - Involved for photosynthetic oxygen revolution - Deficiency: Normally not existing - Toxicity: Leaf margin chlorosis, necrosis on all leaves - Fertilizer: Never applied
Soil Quality
Important
Mineral Deficiency
symptoms depend on
role of nutrient mobility in plant
ex: if nutrients move freely, symptoms will show up 1st in older organs (& vice versa)
Humus
important component of topsoil consists of decomposing organic material formed by the action of bacteria & fungi on dead organisms, feces, fallen leaves, etc. prevents clay from packing tightly together builds a crumbly soil that retains water but is still porous enough to aerate roots reservoir of mineral nutrients
Topsoil
most important for plant growth a mixture of particles derived from rock, living organisms, & the remains of partially decayed organic material (humus) texture of topsoil depends on sizes of its particles composition topsoil has a high number & variety of organisms:
Loams
most
fertile topsoils made up of roughly equal amounts of sand, silt, & clay the fine particles help retain minerals & water the coarse particles provide air spaces that contain oxygen needed by roots for cellular respiration
Fertilizers
commercial
N, P, K
minerals are available immediately but may not be retained by soil for long
organic
MARIA
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