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Nutrients, pH and Fertility Topic 2035 Anna Blight Cation Exchange Capacity (CEC) • A measure of nutrient holding capacity of soil • Cation exchange takes place when the root makes contact with negatively charged clay or humus particle • Root exchanges H+ ions for other cations which are absorbed by roots for nutrition CEC • The amount of these positively charged cations a soil can hold is described as the CEC • Expressed in milliequivalents per 100 grams (meq/100g) of soil • The larger this number, the more cations the soil can hold • A clay soil will have a larger CEC than a sandy soil Cations are + charged • Think of the ‘t’ in cation and + • Ca++ Mg+ H+ K+ NH4+ • H+ easily hydrated to H20 when joined with OH- ion • NH4+ (ammonium) adheres to clay or humus and resists leaching until converted to NO3- by micro-organisms Anions are • Clay and humus have many negative charges • NO3- is nitrate form of Nitrogen • Most preferred form of plants • Highly soluble and easily leached from soil because of negative charge pH • Measure of H+ concentration • pH is logarithmic function, each number is 10 times greater than the number before • Range between 1 to 14 pH • The pH of water and fertilizer also important • Influences nutrient availability • Lots of plants like slightly acid soil of 6.5 to 6.8. Low pH • High H+ • ACID soil • pH below 7 • If pH is too low, add lime High pH • Low H+ • ALKALINE soil • pH above 7 • If pH is too high, add sulfur Fertility • Soil tests can determine pH and nutrient availability in the soil • Fertilizer analysis is represented as a percentage by weight of elemental N, P2O5 and K2O • 10-10-10 fertilizer contains 10% nitrogen, 4.4% P and 8.3% K Fertilizer analysis • P2O5 is 44% actual elemental Phosphorus • Multiply P205 x .44 to obtain P • K2O is 83% actual elemental Potassium • Multiply K2O x .83 to obtain K CHOPKNSCaFeMg • “See Hopkins Café, Mighty Good!” • Carbon, Hydrogen, Oxygen, Phosphorus, Potassium, Nitrogen, Sulfur, Calcium, Iron and Magnesium Macronutrients • NPK • Nitrogen, Phosphorus, Potassium • Most important nutrients used in larger quantities by plants • Secondary are Calcium, Magnesium, and Sulfur (Ca Mg S) Micronutrients • Used in smaller quantities by plants • Iron, Copper, Zinc • Manganese, Boron, Molybdenum • Chlorine Nitrogen • Important for overall growth of plant • Deficiency symptoms are small, pale yellow leaves • Stunted growth Phosphorus • Growth and flower and root development • Deficient plants show purple/red on the older leaves or dead areas on leaves Potassium (K) • Regulation of water within plant cell and water loss through transpiration • Disease resistance • Potassium deficiency shows mottled chlorosis in leaves, or dead areas on leaf tips and margins Resources • http://aged.ces.uga.edu/lessons/course01461.htm • Integrated Plant Health Management Training Program for Landscape Maintenance Providers, MSU Nursery and Landscape Team • http://hubcap.clemson.edu/~blpprt/bobweb/BOBWEB24.H TM • http://ltpwww.gsfc.nasa.gov/globe/index.htm