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SOIL NUTRIENTS

Submitted by ThompsonShuswap on Mon, 09/26/2022 - 09:38
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Thompson Shuswap

SOIL HEALTH SERIES

Nutrients reach the soil in many different ways: from decomposed animal waste and dead plants, the atmosphere, weathering of rocks, and bacteria conversions.Soil nutrients

To complete their life cycle, plants need ESSENTIAL NUTRIENTS, each in varying degrees.

  • CARBONOXYGEN and HYDROGEN are essential to plant growth and are supplied by air and water
  • The other essential elements are referred to as mineral nutrients and enter plants almost exclusively through the roots. These nutrients are divided into two groups.

MACRONUTRIENTS (primary/secondary nutrients) are required by plants in larger        amounts and include nitrogen, phosphorus,  potassium, calcium, magnesium and sulfur.

MICRONUTRIENTS (trace elements) are tiny amounts of nutrients that include iron,       chlorine, manganese, boron, zinc, copper, and molybdenum.

  • ALL MACRO/MICRO nutrients are critical to normal plant growth and development; they are simply needed in different amounts.
  • IF growing conditions are good, a plant will absorb nutrients from the soil.
     
  • IF a plant experiences extremes in temperature, incorrect light levels, or water- logged or compacted soil, it will have a limited ability to absorb nutrients (*plants in dormant stages absorb few nutrients).

Sources:
North Carolina State Extension. North Carolina State Extension Gardener Handbook. Soils & Plant Nutrients,
https://content.ces.ncsu.edu/extension-gardener-handbook/1-soils-and-plant-nutrients

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