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Reading Water, Media and Tissue Tests. Bodie V. Pennisi Extension Floriculture Specialist, UGA. What Do You Do If Your Pansies Look Like These?. Investigate:. Nutritional ? Which nutrient(s) ? Deficiency or toxicity ? Cause(s) ?. Macronutrient-Related Problems.
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Reading Water, Media and Tissue Tests Bodie V. Pennisi Extension Floriculture Specialist, UGA
Investigate: • Nutritional ? • Which nutrient(s) ? • Deficiency or toxicity ? • Cause(s) ?
N Def: lower leaf yellowing (courtesy of Dr. Whipker, NCSU)
N Def: Lower leaf yellowing and loss (courtesy of Dr. Whipker, NCSU)
P Def: Lower leaf purpling (courtesy of Dr. Whipker, NCSU)
N Overdose: Upper leaf roll (courtesy of Dr. Whipker, NCSU)
High Nutrient Concentration in the Medium Causes Marginal Leaf Burn Water leaves the leaves via stomates, but the trace elements cannot escape. The effect is most pronounced at leaf margins where air movement causes the greatest evaporation.
Problems Mg Def: Lower leaves with interveinal chlorosis (courtesy of Dr. Whipker, NCSU)
It Is All About the pH… At high pH the micronutrients (Fe, Mn, B, Zn, Cu) become less available. At low pH, they become too available.
Media pH is affected by: • lime incorporated • water alkalinity and pH • type of fertilizer used (basic or acidic) • species grown
Crops Can Be Placed Into Groups • Geranium Group • Plants that are very efficient in taking up Fe • Ex: seed and zonal geraniums, marygolds, New Guinea impatiens, lisianthus • Petunia Group • Plants that are very inefficient in taking up Fe • Ex: petunias, pansies, snapdragons, calibrachoa, vinca
Geranium with chlorotic lower leaves which quickly turn necrotic (courtesy of Dr. Whipker, NCSU)
Lower leaves of pepper with black speckles (courtesy of Dr. Whipker, NCSU)
Lower leaves of marigold with yellow speckles (courtesy of Dr. Whipker, NCSU)
Lower leaves of cosmos with black speckles (courtesy of Dr. Whipker, NCSU)
(courtesy of Dr. Whipker, NCSU) Upper leaves with interveinal chlorosis
(courtesy of Dr. Whipker, NCSU) Upper leaves with interveinal chlorosis
(courtesy of Dr. Whipker, NCSU) Upper leaves with interveinal chlorosis
Basic Tests • Concentration of the fertilizer solution • pH and soluble salts in the growing medium • Leaf tissue analysis • Water Quality
Testing the growing medium • EC (SS) and pH of the leachate • In-house tests can be done with the pour-through method • Sending samples to a lab: do not use the top 1/2 to 1 inch of the soil • NO3--N, NH4+-N, P, K, Ca, Mg
Different Methods to Measure EC 1:2 SME Indication PourThru 0 to 0.3 0.3 to 0.8 0.8 to 1.3 1.3 to 1.8 1.8 to 2.3 > 2.3 0 to 0.8 0.8 to 2.0 2.0 to 3.5 3.5 to 5.0 5.0 to 6.0 > 6.0 0 to 1.0 1.0 to 2.6 2.6 to 4.6 4.6 to 6.5 6.6 to 7.8 > 7.8 Very Low Low Normal High Very High Extreme
Tissue analysis Marigold problem
Sending tissue samples for analysis • For routine analysis: young, but full-grown leaves near the top of the canopy • Rinse the leaves gently if fertilizer was applied with an overhead irrigation system • B, Ca, Fe, Mn, Zn (not readily translocated within the plant) • Younger leaves
Chrysanthemums • Upper leaves – N, Ca, S, Fe, B • Lower leaves – K, Mg, Zn • Upper or lower leaves – P, Mn • Middle leaves – Cu • Routine analysis – most recent fully mature leaf
Tissue Analysis • Concentrations of macro- and micronutrients • These analyses may or may not include recommendations, depending on the lab
Need test for alkalinity • Need Fluorine (F) and/or Chlorine (Cl) if high levels are suspected.
Summary of Basic Tests • Fertilizer solution • Greenhouse medium • Plant tissue • Water