1 / 8

Lecture 3 Plant nutrition

Lecture 3 Plant nutrition. 3.4c. Potassium deficiency. Symptoms - mottled or marginal chlorosis, which then develops into necrosis on tips, margins and between veins - symptoms initially on more mature (“older”) leaves - leaves may curl and crinkle - stems may be slender and weak, with

kalyca
Download Presentation

Lecture 3 Plant nutrition

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Lecture 3Plant nutrition 3.4c

  2. Potassium deficiency Symptoms - mottled or marginal chlorosis, which then develops into necrosis on tips, margins and between veins - symptoms initially on more mature (“older”) leaves - leaves may curl and crinkle - stems may be slender and weak, with abnormally short internodal regions - in K-deficient corn, nodes may have increased susceptibility to root-rotting fungus present in the soil - this together with stem weakness results in bending of stems to the ground (lodging) Soybean Corn

  3. Iron deficiency Symptoms - strong chlorosis at the base of the leaves with some green netting - deficiency starts out with interveinal chlorosis of the youngest leaves, evolves into an overall chlorosis, and ends as a totally bleached leaf - bleached areas often develop necrotic spots - because iron has a low mobility, iron deficiency symptoms appear first on the youngest leaves - iron deficiency is strongly associated with calcareous soils and anaerobic conditions, and it is often induced by an excess of heavy metals

  4. Analysis of plant tissues reveals mineral deficiencies

  5. Influence of the pH on the availability of nutrient elements in organic soils - main losses of nutrients from agricultural systems is due to leaching that carries dissolved ions, especially nitrate, away with drainage water - in acid soils, leaching may be decreased by the addition of lime – a mix of CaO, CaCO3 and Ca(OH)2 –to make the soil more alkaline, because many elements form lesssoluble compounds when the pH is higher than 6 - width of the shaded areas in the graph indicates the degree of nutrient availability to the plant root

  6. Treating nutritional deficiencies • Inorganic fertilizer… – Straight fertilizer..Super phosphate, ammonium nitrate – Compound fertilizer (i.e. contain two or more mineral nutrients) • Organic fertilizer – Residues of plant and animals – Mineralization (organic compounds broken down by microorganisms)

  7. Foliar application of fertilizers • Uptake is faster • Deficiency can be prevented • Not tied up in soils (Fe, Mn and Cu) • Expensive • Vineyards

  8. The principle of cation exchange on the surface of a soil particle - cations are bound to the surface of soil particles, because the surface is negatively charged - addition of a cation such as K+ can displace another cation such as Ca2+ from its binding on the surface of the soil particle and make it available for uptake by the root - mineral anions (NO3 _, Cl_) tend to be repelled by the negative charge of the surface and remain dissolved in soil solution; capacity of exchange of anions is smaller than of cation

More Related