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Soil Chemistry

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soils in in regions of high rainfall tend to be acid. Cations ... Boron. Molybdenum. Chlorine. Nickel. Remember 17. C. Hopkins Caf Managed by my cousin Mocel ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Soil Chemistry


1
Soil Chemistry
  • pH
  • soil
  • soil solution
  • Cation Exchange Capacity
  • charge of soil particles

2
Soil pH
  • Measure of Hydrogen ion activity
  • Acidic-Neutral-Alkaline
  • determines availability of nutrients
  • buffering - soil resist sudden large changes in pH

3
pH Range
  • Note this a
  • Logarithmic Scale  based on the
  • "powers of ten" 
  • pH 6.0 is  10-times  more acidic than pH 7.0
  • pH 5.0 is  100-times more acidic than pH 7.0
  • 6.5-7.2 is ideal

4
Acidic Soil
  • soils in in regions of high rainfall tend to be
    acid
  • Cations leach according to strength held
  • HgtCagtMggtKgtNH4gtNa
  • as cations are leached from soil solution,
    cations on soil particles move into soil solution
  • H replaces these cations on the soil particle
  • pH of soil decreases - becomes more acidic

5
Acidic Soil
  • add acid forming materials to soil to amend pH
  • peat moss, pine needles
  • elemental sulfur, sulfate fertilizers
  • form H2SO4 - increase H concentration

6
Alkaline Soil
  • increase soil pH with lime (CaCO3)
  • in soil solution Ca and OH- (hydroxyl ion)
  • Increased Ca concentration displaces H
  • H interacts with OH in soil solution
  • pH increases - becomes more alkaline

7
Cation Exchange Capacity
  • Clay and organic matter have a negative charge
  • attract and hold cations
  • Cations are attracted/held with different
    strength
  • HgtCagtMggtKgtNH4gtNa
  • soluble salts - amount of cation salts in soil
    solution

8
Plant Nutritional Requirements
  • Depend on
  • plant/crop characteristics
  • rate of growth - light temperature
  • stage of development
  • flower, fruiting, rooting
  • growing medium - CEC
  • amount of rainfall/irrigation
  • temperature
  • container size - limited reservoir

9
Essential Elements for Plants
  • Iron
  • Manganese
  • Zinc
  • Copper
  • Boron
  • Molybdenum
  • Chlorine
  • Nickel
  • Carbon
  • Oxygen
  • Hydrogen
  • Nitrogen
  • Phosphorus
  • Potassium
  • Calcium
  • Magnesium
  • Sulfur

10
Remember 17
  • C. Hopkins Café Managed by my cousin Mocel
  • C H O P K N S Ca Fe Mg B Mn Cu Zn Mo Cl

For a Nickel
11
Nitrogen (N) pg 253
  • Plants take up in form of
  • NO3-(rarely), NO2-, NH4
  • nitrate(NO3-) highly leachable
  • Sources
  • Ammonium, Nitrate, Urea
  • Functions
  • synthesis of amino acids, proteins, chlorophyll,
    nucleic acids and coenzymes
  • Vegetative growth

12
Phosphorus (P)
  • Plants take up as
  • H2PO4- orthophosphorus (acid)
  • HPO4- monohydrogen phosphate (alkaline)
  • Source
  • mined apatite (rock phosphate)
  • decomposition of organic matter

13
Phosphorus
  • Function
  • energy (ATP, NADPH) metabolic transfer processes,
    photosynthesis, respiration, nucleic acids
    (genetic material), phospholipids (membranes)
  • early maturity (flowers and fruit), root growth,
    stem strength

14
Potassium (K)
  • Taken up in elemental form
  • Source
  • Potassium chloride, Potassium sulfate, potassium
    nitrate
  • Function
  • sugar and starch formation, synthesis of proteins
  • enzyme reactions, osmotic regulation, stomatal
    opening

15
Iron (Fe)
  • Function
  • chlorophyll synthesis, enzymes, photosynthesis
  • Source
  • soils
  • ferrous sulfates

16
Chelating Agents
  • large organic molecule that plant can absorb
  • combine with cations to prevent them from
    reacting with anions that would make them
    insoluble and unavailable
  • combine with iron, manganese, zinc, copper

17
Determining Requirements
  • controlled studies for crop and production
    techniques
  • soil test - need to consider availability not
    just presence
  • tissue analysis -
  • tissue and when it is sampled varies for each crop

18
Nutrient availability
  • Amount of nutrient in soil /soil solution
  • Form of Nutrient
  • Water availability
  • pH

19
pH and Nutrient Uptake
20
Nutrient Deficiency
  • Mobile N P K Cl Mg
  • Immobile B Ca Cu Fe Mn Ni S Zn
  • Chlorotic
  • Interveinal
  • Necrosis
  • Stunting
  • Handout

21
Photo Websites
  • www.hbci.com/wenonah/min-def/list.htm
  • http//hort.ufl.edu/nutdef
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