What's new
  • As of today ICMag has his own Discord server. In this Discord server you can chat, talk with eachother, listen to music, share stories and pictures...and much more. Join now and let's grow together! Join ICMag Discord here! More details in this thread here: here.

ORGANIC FERTILIZERS main macronutrients (f.y.i.)

I.M. Boggled

Certified Bloomin' Idiot
Veteran
What's This About N-P-K ..?
By J. Black@PlanetNatural

Confused about the numbers associated with organic fertilizers?
What value do they offer organic gardeners?
A plant needs nutrients to survive.

Most of these are provided by the soil, but soil varies tremendously in nutrient amounts, soil type, pH, and nutrient availability.

The three main nutrients that have been identified as absolutely necessary for plants are nitrogen (N), phosphorus (P) and potassium (K).
These three are also known as macronutrients, and are the source of the three numbers commonly found on organic fertilizer labels.
The numbers found on a general All-Purpose Fertilizer, for example, are 7-7-2. This is the percentage by weight of the N, P, and K found in the fertilizer.

So what’s so important about nitrogen, phosphorus and potassium?

Nitrogen (N) is probably the most widely recognized nutrient, known primarily for its ability to “green up” lawns.
Nitrogen mainly affects vegetative growth and general health.
Chlorophyll, the green substance in plants responsible for photosynthesis, is largely composed of nitrogen.
It is also used heavily in new shoots, buds, and leaves.

Air contains about 78% nitrogen, but atmospheric nitrogen is not readily available to plants.
They must absorb it through the soil. Ammonium and nitrate are both readily available forms of nitrogen, but they are common in chemical fertilizers and leach heavily and quickly out of the soil.

Nitrogen can be applied organically in many ways, including composted manure, blood meal, canola meal, fish powder and various liquid organic fertilizers. Keep in mind that many organic dry fertilizers are slow-release, helping the long-term nitrogen content and building up organic matter in the soil.

Nitrogen deficiency is recognized by the yellowing of older leaves, slowing or stopping of growth. Leaves may drop sooner than expected. Excess nitrogen is recognized by extremely fast growth, resulting in long, spindly, weak shoots with dark green leaves.

Phosphorus (P) is important for healthy roots and is used more heavily during blooming and seed set. Phosphorus is easily rendered unavailable to plants when the pH is slightly unbalanced. It is released in soil through decomposing organic matter.

Phosphorus deficiency is recognized by dull green leaves and purplish stems. The plant is generally unhealthy, sometimes yellowing.
Lack of blooming with lush green foliage may also indicated a lack of phosphorus.

Organic phosphorus can be found in rock phosphate, bone meal and various liquid organic fertilizers such as fish emulsion.

Potassium (K), sometimes known as potash, is important for general health of plants. It is key in the formation of cholorphyll and other plant compounds. Potassium is also known to help with desease resistance.

Potassium deficiency is hard to symptomize, but plants are generally sickly, with small fruit, yellowing from the older leaves upwards, and sickly blooms.

Sources of organic potassium include molasses, kelp, sul-po-mag (sulfate of potash magnesia, quick release), greensand, and various liquid fertilizers such as Earth Juice’s Meta-K.


:cool:
 
Last edited:

I.M. Boggled

Certified Bloomin' Idiot
Veteran
The key is plant nutrition

The key is plant nutrition

Plants need lots more of some nutrients than others, and — depending on whether the plant is currently sprouting or is producing blooms and fruit—their nutritional needs will vary over the life cycle, like any other living thing.
Those fertilizer labels are coded to match such needs.

Macronutrients:
The three main elements that plants need in large amounts are nitrogen (N), phosphorus (P), and potassium (K).

The three numbers on your package label indicate the percentages of N, P, and K in the mix, in that order.

A 10-10-5 fertilizer contains 10% nitrogen, 10% phosphorus, and 5% potassium.

A higher number means a higher concentration of that nutrient in the mix.
The higher the number, the less you need to use.

In 100 pounds of 10-10-5 fertilizer, you will find 10 pounds of nitrogen, 10 pounds of phosophorus, and 5 pounds of potassium.
...
There are several more macronutrients in the plant world, of course, but N, P, and K are the majors for most fertilizers.

Each nutrient supports a particular aspect of your plant's growth, and where you are in the season will predict which you want to supply in the greatest proportion.

Nitrogen is the force behind healthy, abundant, green leaf growth.
It's a key part of chlorophyll, and basically boosts growth of the upper parts of a plant;

Phosphorus boosts root, fruit, and bloom growth; and

Potassium is also called "potash," and it builds the systemic health of the plant: strong cell walls that hold water and help nutrients move around inside the plant.

Many gardeners refer to the roles of these nutrients as "Up, Down, and Around!"

Plants need other nutrients in smaller amounts, including copper, iron, and zinc:
these are called "micronutrients."

http://www.wnetwork.com/articles/home_gardenT1.asp?id=758

:cool:
 

Latest posts

Latest posts

Top