Title: Chapter 29 Plant Nutrition and Soil
1Chapter 29 Plant Nutrition and Soil
- Sun, Water, Nutrients necessary
- CO2 and H20 into organic compounds
- Synthesize all required amino acids, vitamins,
using inorganic nutrients from environment. - Evolution designed for efficient
- uptake of raw material and
- distribution
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3Plant Nutrition and soil
- Essential Elements
- Functions of Essential Elements
- The soil
- Nutrient cycles
- Nitrogen and Nitrogen cycle
- The Phosphorus Cycle
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5Nitrogen cycle
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7Plant Nutrition and Soils
- Plant Nutrition- involves the uptake from the
envrionment of all the raw material required for - Essential biochemical processes (metabolism and
growth) - Distribution within the plant
- More than 60 chemical elements identified
- Not all essential (gold, silver, lead, mercury,
arsenic, uranium) - Phytoremediation- the removal of contaminants
8The fungus Boletus parasiticus Forms
Ectomycorrhizae on the Roots of a red pine
(Pinus resinosa) Increase uptake of water and
Phophorus Also Protects against pathogenic
Fungi and nematodes
9Essential Elements
- Criteria
- Needed for life cycle
- and/or
- Essential for parts
- i.e. Mg in chlorophyll
- Nitrogen in protein
- 17 essential
10Essential elements
- Necessary for plant growth
- In the absence plant displayed characteristic
abnormalities of growth, or deficiency symptoms,
reproduction - In 1880 established that at least 10 essential
- Essential elements/minerals (inorganic
nutrients)- Carbon, hydrogen, oxygen, potassium,
calcium, magnesium, nitrogen , phosphorus, sulfur
and iron - By the 1950s added seven more, manganese, zinc,
copper, chlorine, boron, molybdenum, and nickel
11The essential elements can be divided into
Micronutrients and Macronutrients
- Micronutrients- trace elements equal or less than
100 mg/kg - Macronutrients require large amounts above 100
mg/kg - Nutrient sometimes greater in conc. Than soil
thus have to use energy - Certain plant species are chars. By specific
elements
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13Plants of the mustard family i.e. Wintercress use
sulfur Synth. Mustard oil
14Horsetail silicon into cell walls Making it
indigestible for herbivores
15Functions of Essential Elements
- Essential elements Functions and Defieciency
symptoms Table 29-2
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17Nutrient Deficiency symptoms Depend on functions
and mobility of essential elements
- Chlorosis Fig. 29-3- loss or reduced development
of chlorophyll - Magnesium, essential for chlorophyll
- Younger leaves vs. older leaves
- Depends on phloem
- Phosphorus, potassium and nitrogen are also
phloem-mobile (appear in older first) - Iron and calcium are phloem immobile (appear in
younger first) - Sulfur and zinc intermediate in mobility
18Deficiency of magnesisum a phloem mobile element
in Maise- older leaves more affected than
younger
19Sorghum - Deficiency of iron a so called phloem
immobile element results in symptoms of chlorosis
in younger leaves
20The soil
21- Primary nutrient medium for plants
- Root systems (fibrous anchor)
- Weathering of rock produce the inorganic nutrients
Fibrous roots that bind and anchor prairie soil
22Three major soil types
- Coniferous- acidic little accumulation of humus
is leached of minerals - Cool temperate deciduous decay is more rapid,
leaching less, soil more fertile - Grasslands, almost all plant dies each year
organic material returned to soil- highly fertile
soil, often black in color
23Soil consist of layers called Horizons
24Living organisms of the A horizon
Microbes, small mammals, earthworms Ants
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