Plant Nutrition – The Crucial Importance Of Trace Elements For Your Garden Plants
Most home gardeners are aware that the garden plants require a
supply of mineral nutrient for their growth and development. As
elements like nitrogen, phosphorus and potassium are the names that
usually appear on fertilizer
packages, it is sometimes assumed that they are the “important”
nutrients. On the other hand, the so-called trace elements, with the
possible exception of iron, are often considered to be of negligable
importance.
Nothing could be further than the truth. Trace elements like
Manganese, Iron, Zinc, and Copper, are every bit as vital to plant
metabolism, as they play essential functions in such processes as
respiration and photosynthesis, and so a deficiency in even one element
will adversely affect the healthy growth of the plant.
Trace elements are called as such because they are required by the
plants in miniscule quantities, while the macro elements such as
nitrogen are needed and consumed by plants in large quantities. For
this reason the latter are sometimes lacking in sufficient amounts, and
so have to be supplied artificially by means of chemical or organic
fertilizer. Recognising then that the trace elements have to be
available to the plants, how can the home gardener ensure that they be
so? To answer that, let’s understand a few basic points about trace
elements particularly as they apply to dry and Mediterranean climates.
*In the chalky, alkaline soils common to most arid regions, trace elements are normally present in sufficient quantities.
*When present in excessive concentrations however, some are actually
poisonous for plants, no more so than the essential element, boron. In
fact one of the problems associated with the increasing salinity of dry
climate soils, is the rising concentration of trace elements to the
point where they are liable to poison garden plants.
*Deficiencies in one or more trace element are most likely to be
caused by soil conditions that render the element unavailable to the
plants. For instance, in alkaline soils, iron tends to crystallize into
a solid state. Due to the fact that plants take up the elements as
mineral salts dissolved in the soil water, it follows that in solid
form an element cannot be absorbed by the plants’ roots. Poor aeration,
typical of many heavy, clay soils is another factor preventing the
uptake of essential elements.
*An excess of one trace element in the soil water, (where it is
available to be taken up by plant roots) can cause another one to
become absorbed by the mineral clay of the soil particles and thus be
removed from the soil water. Such is the case with iron, which in high
concentrations, “pushes out” manganese and zinc. It follows therefore
that iron fertilizers should be used with great caution, as their
misuse, is liable to create a deficiency in other minerals.
*In most cases, sound management of the soil should suffice in
preventing trace element deficiencies. This entails ensuring adequate
drainage and high percentages of organic matter, by way of compost,
in the earth. As a result, oxygen levels in the soil rise, and it also
becomes less alkaline, thereby increasing the solubility of many
mineral salts. In principle, fertilizers which contain trace elements
are best reserved for the artificial potting media in use for container
culture.
*The most common symptom
of iron deficiency is the yellowing of the plants’ foliage – a
condition known as chlorosis. Yet these symptoms could alternatively
indicate nitrogen deficiency, which can occur under anaerobic soil
conditions, even when copious amounts of nitrogen fertilizer are
regularly applied. It’s better therefore to try and improve poor
conditions such as compacted soil in lawns, before rushing in with iron
fertilizer. A soil test may be suitable as well.
*Applying iron fertilizer though is sometimes the answer for plants
growing by walls, where building material residues raise the pH
(acid-alkaline scale) to a level of alkalinity that prevents iron from
dissolving in the soil water. Iron fertilizers normally come in chelate
form
,
which bypass the soil pH. The chelate’s properties of protecting the
iron molecules from crystallizing are lost though when exposed to sun
light. So the fertilizer has to be dug into the soil as quickly as
possible.
My name is Jonathan Ya'akobi.I've been gardening in a professional capacity since 1984.I am the former head gardener of the Jerusalem Botanical Garden,
but now concentrate on building gardens for private home owners.I also
teach horticulture to students on training courses.I'd love to help you
get the very best from your garden,so you're welcome to visit me on http://www.dryclimategardening.com