Introduction

  • Plant nutrients occur in the soil in the form of soluble substances.
  • These substances are absorbed by plants in varying quantities depending on their roles in plant tissues.

Essential Elements

  • These are nutrients required by plants for various physiological and biochemical functions.
  • They are divided into two broad categories:
    • Macronutrients
    • Micronutrients

Macronutrients

  • Also known as major nutrients.
  • Required by plants in large quantities for growth and development.

They include:

  • Carbon
  • Hydrogen
  • Oxygen
  • Nitrogen
  • Phosphorus
  • Potassium
  • Sulphur
  • Calcium
  • Magnesium
  • Nitrogen, phosphorus, and potassium are referred to as fertilizer elements.
  • Calcium, magnesium, and sulphur are referred to as liming elements.

Role of Macronutrients in Plants

Nitrogen (NO3, NH4+)

Sources:

  • Artificial fertilizers
  • Organic matter
  • Atmospheric fixation by lightning
  • Nitrogen-fixing bacteria

Role of Nitrogen in Plants

  • Promotes vegetative growth
  • Essential for chlorophyll formation
  • Contributes to the build-up of protoplasm
  • Improves leaf quality in leafy crops such as tea and cabbages

Deficiency Symptoms

  • Yellowing of leaves (chlorosis)
  • Stunted growth
  • Premature ripening
  • Premature shedding of leaves
  • Light seeds

Effect of Excess Nitrogen

  • Scorching of leaves
  • Delayed maturity

Loss of Nitrogen From the Soil

  • Soil erosion
  • Leaching
  • Volatilization
  • Crop removal
  • Utilization by microorganisms

Phosphorus (H2PO4, HPO42-, P2O5)

Sources:

  • Organic manures
  • Commercial fertilizers
  • Phosphate rocks

Role of Phosphorus

  • Encourages rapid root growth
  • Improves overall plant quality
  • Accelerates crop maturity
  • Influences cell division
  • Stimulates nodule formation in legumes

Deficiency Symptoms

  • Slow plant growth
  • Delayed maturity
  • Leaves turn grey or purple
  • Reduced yield of grains, fruits, and seeds

Loss of Phosphorus From the Soil

  • Soil erosion
  • Leaching
  • Crop removal
  • Fixation by iron and aluminium oxides

Potassium (K+, K2O)

Sources:

  • Crop residues and organic manures
  • Commercial fertilizers
  • Potassium-bearing minerals such as feldspar and mica

Role of Potassium in Plants

  • Increases plant vigor and disease resistance
  • Enhances the size of grains and seeds
  • Reduces negative effects of excess nitrogen
  • Prevents overly rapid maturation caused by phosphorus

Deficiency Symptoms

  • Short joints and poor growth
  • Plants lodge before maturity
  • Leaves develop burnt margins
  • Lower leaves become mottled, spotted, or streaked
  • In maize, grains, and grasses, firing starts at the leaf tip and spreads from the edge, leaving the midrib green

Loss of Potassium From the Soil

  • Crop removal
  • Leaching
  • Soil erosion
  • Fixation in the soil

Calcium (Ca2+)

Sources:

  • Crop residues and organic manures
  • Commercial fertilizers
  • Weathering of soil minerals
  • Agricultural limes such as dolomite and limestone

Role of Calcium in Plants

  • Improves vigor and stiffness of straw
  • Neutralizes poisonous secretions within plants
  • Assists in grain and seed formation
  • Enhances soil structure
  • Promotes bacterial activity in soil
  • Corrects soil acidity

Deficiency Symptoms

  • Young leaves remain closed
  • Light green bands along leaf margins
  • Terminal bud leaves become hooked; die-back occurs at tips and margins

Loss of Calcium

  • Crop removal
  • Leaching
  • Soil erosion

Magnesium (Mg2+)

Sources:

  • Crop residues and organic manures
  • Commercial fertilizers
  • Weathering of soil minerals
  • Agricultural limes

Role of Magnesium in Plants

  • Constituent of chlorophyll
  • Promotes growth of soil bacteria and enhances nitrogen fixation in legumes
  • Activates production and transport of carbohydrates and proteins in growing plants

Deficiency Symptoms

  • Loss of green color starting from lower leaves and moving upward
  • Veins remain green while leaf tissue yellows
  • Leaves curve upward along margins
  • Stalks weaken and plants develop long branched roots
  • Leaves become streaked

Sulphur (SO42-, SO2)

Sources:

  • Commercial fertilizers
  • Soil minerals containing sulphides
  • Atmospheric sulphur from industrial emissions
  • Rainwater

Role of Sulphur in Plants

  • Formation and activation of coenzyme-A
  • Constituent of amino acids
  • Influences various physiological processes

Deficiency Symptoms

  • Stunted growth and small plants
  • Poor nodulation in legumes
  • Light green to yellowish leaves (chlorosis)
  • Delayed maturity

Micronutrients

  • Also called trace or minor nutrients
  • Required in very small quantities
  • Essential for proper growth and development of plants

They include:

  • Iron
  • Manganese
  • Copper
  • Boron
  • Molybdenum
  • Chlorine

Role of Micronutrients and Their Deficiency Symptoms

  • Copper
  • Involved in oxidation-reduction reactions
  • Important for respiration and iron utilization
  • Deficiency symptoms: yellowing of young leaves
  • Iron
  • Essential for protein synthesis
  • Participates in oxidation-reduction reactions
  • Deficiency symptoms: leaf chlorosis
  • Molybdenum
  • Involved in nitrogen transformation in plants
  • Helps metabolize nitrates into amino acids and proteins
  • Deficiency symptoms: leaf curl and scorching
  • Manganese – similar role as molybdenum
  • Zinc
  • Involved in formation of growth hormones
  • Important for reproduction processes
  • Deficiency symptoms: white bud formation
  • Boron
  • Facilitates water absorption
  • Assists in sugar translocation

Inorganic Fertilizers

  • Chemically produced substances added to soil to improve fertility.

Classification According to:

  • Nutrients contained
  • Straight – contain only one macronutrient
  • Compound fertilizers – contain more than one macronutrient
  • Time of application
  • Some applied at planting
  • Top dressing after crop emergence
    • Effects on soil pH
    • Acidic fertilizers
    • Neutral fertilizers
    • Basic fertilizers

Properties and Identification of Fertilizers

Nitrogenous Fertilizers

Characteristics
  • Highly soluble in water
  • Highly mobile in soil; usually applied as top dress
  • Easily leached due to high solubility; no residual effect
  • Can scorch young crops during wet seasons
  • Volatilizes easily during hot seasons
  • Tends to cake under moist conditions
  • Hygroscopic; should be stored in dry conditions
Examples:
  • Sulphate of Ammonia (NH4)2SO4

Physical appearance:

  • White crystals
  • Acidic effect
  • Contains 20% nitrogen
  • Ammonium Sulphate Nitrate [(NH4)2SO4 + NH4NO3]
  • Granules appear yellow-orange
  • Less acidic
  • Contains 26% nitrogen
  • Calcium Ammonium Nitrate (CAN)
  • Greyish granules
  • Neutral in nature
  • Contains 21% nitrogen
  • Urea
  • Small whitish granules
  • Easily leached or volatilized
  • Contains 45-46% nitrogen

Phosphate Fertilizers

  • Low solubility and immobile in soil
  • Non-scorching
  • High residual effect; benefits subsequent season’s crop
  • Easy to store; not hygroscopic
Examples:
  • Single super-phosphate
  • Whitish, creamy white granules
  • Contains 20-21% P2O5
  • Double super-phosphate
  • Dark greyish granules
  • Contains 40-42% P2O5
  • Triple super-phosphate
  • Small greyish granules
  • Contains 44-48% P2O5

Potassic Fertilizers

Characteristics:
  • Moderate scorching effect
  • Moderately soluble in water
  • Most Kenyan soils have sufficient potassium
Examples:
  • Muriate of Potash (KCl)
  • Contains 60-62% K2O
  • Slightly hygroscopic
  • Appearance: amorphous white
  • Sulphate of Potash (50% K2O)

Compound or Mixed Fertilizers

  • Fertilizers supplying two or more macronutrients
Examples:
  • Mono ammonium phosphate
  • Di-ammonium phosphate
  • 20:20:20, 23:23:23

Advantages of Compound Fertilizers

  • Saves time and money
  • Mixtures have improved storage properties and better handling

Disadvantages of Compound Fertilizers

  • Expensive
  • Wasteful if not properly applied
  • Mixing may not be thorough
  • Possible incompatibility of individual fertilizers

Methods of Fertilizer Application

  • Broadcasting – random scattering of fertilizers on the ground
  • Placement method – applying fertilizers in the planting holes
  • Side dressing – placing fertilizer beside the plant within the root zone, in bands or spot-rings
  • Foliar spraying – applying specially formulated fertilizer solution on foliage in spray form
  • Drip method – applying fertilizer through irrigation water

Determination of Fertilizer Rates

Fertilizer contents are expressed as fertilizer grade or fertilizer analysis.

  • Fertilizer grade indicates the guaranteed minimum of active ingredients (N, P2O5, K2O) in the mixture.
  • Expressed as a percentage on a weight-to-weight basis.

Example: 10:20:0 means that in every 100 kg of the mixture, there are 10 kg of nitrogen, 20 kg of P2O5, and 0 kg of K2O.

Example

A farmer was asked to apply fertilizers as follows:

  • 60 kg/ha nitrogen (top dressing)
  • 60 kg/ha P2O5 (in planting hole)
  • 60 kg/ha K2O

Calculate the amount of sulphate of ammonia (20% N) required per hectare.

Calculate the amount of double super-phosphate (40% P2O5) required per hectare.

Calculate the amount of muriate of potash (50% K2O) required per hectare.

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Answer/Solution

  • Sulphate of ammonia (SA) to supply 60 kg/ha N:

    = (60 / 20) × 100 = 300 kg SA

  • Double super phosphate (DSP) to supply 60 kg/ha P2O5:

    = (60 / 40) × 100 = 150 kg DSP

  • Muriate of potash to supply 60 kg/ha K2O:

    = (60 / 50) × 100 = 120 kg muriate of potash

Example

A farmer applied the following fertilizers:

  • 200 kg/ha of DSP (40% P2O5)
  • 150 kg/ha of muriate of potash (60% K2O)
  • 150 kg/ha of sulphate of ammonia (20% N)

Calculate the amounts of P2O5, K2O, and N applied per hectare.

Solution/Answer

  • P2O5 applied from 200 kg DSP:

    = (40 / 100) × 200 = 80 kg/ha P2O5

  • K2O applied from 150 kg muriate of potash:

    = (60 / 100) × 150 = 90 kg/ha K2O

  • N applied from 150 kg sulphate of ammonia:

    = (20 / 100) × 150 = 30 kg/ha N

Soil Sampling

  • Obtaining a small quantity of soil that is representative of the entire farm.

Soil Sampling Procedures

  • Clear vegetation over the sampling site.
  • Dig soil at depths of 15-25 cm.
  • Place the dug soil in a clean container.
  • Mix the soil thoroughly in the container.
  • Take a sample and send it to the National Agricultural Laboratory for analysis.
  • Label the container properly with:
    • Farmer’s name
    • Location
    • District
    • Farmer’s address

Sites to Avoid

  • Dead furrows and ditches
  • Swamps
  • Near manure heaps
  • Recently fertilized fields
  • Ant hills
  • Under large trees
  • Near fence lines or footpaths
  • Containers contaminated with fertilizers or chemicals should not be used

Methods of Soil Sampling

  • Zigzag method
  • Traverse method

Soil Testing

  • Analysis of soil samples to determine soil qualities and nutrient content.

Importance of Soil Testing

  • Determines soil fertility and suitable crops to grow
  • Identifies nutrient content to guide fertilizer application
  • Determines if soil pH modification is necessary for crop growth

How Soil pH Affects Crop Production

  • Influences physical and chemical soil properties
  • Affects nutrient availability
  • Impacts incidence of soil-borne diseases
  • Determines suitable crops for the area

Methods of pH Testing

  • Universal indicator solution
  • pH meter



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