Agriculture top
Cotton
We see that the cotton plant micronutrients so many deficiency at flower stage fruits
Stage
Boron(B) is classified as an immobile element in plants; once B has been taken up by the
plant it cannot be reallocated to other portions of the plant when Boron availability in the substrate is
limited. As with other immobile elements, symptoms first appear on new leaves. Boron is required to
build plant cell walls, therefore, when not enough B is available the areas of the plant with rapidly
growing new cells (i.e. the growing point and new leaves are affected first). The growing point often
aborts (effectively “pinching” the plant) this leads to proliferation of branches. The branches and new
growth are distorted, thick, and brittle; also the upper foliage can exhibit a mottled chlorosis (i.e.
scattered yellowing of leaves). When the roots are examined they are often short and stubby. Unlike
most nutrient deficiencies that typically exhibit symptoms uniformly across the crop, B symptoms can
appear randomly within a crop, section, or even flat/pot.
Causes:
Boron is absorbed by plant roots and moved through the plant in the transpiration stream, and
similar to Calcium active water movement through the plant is required to drive B uptake. Conditions
that can cause B deficiency include: low B in tap water or fertilizer, high calcium levels (which caninhibit B uptake), inactive roots (waterlogged or dry soil, cold root-zone), high humidity, soil packed
too tightly, or high pH. B deficiency is most often noted on Pansy and Petunia plants – especially
those growing with a limited soil volume (i.e. in plug trays or packs).
Availability of Boron is Related to
Root-Zone pH
The graph on the right illustrates relative
nutrient availability as a function of
substrate pH.
High pH favors Boron deficiency.
Occasionally, if tap water contains too much
Boron, low pH can favor Boron toxicity.
Graph by Doug Bailey University of North
Carolina
Prevention and Solutions:
Prevention is key. While plants that exhibit B deficiency symptoms usually recover after
corrective measures have been taken, the time required for recovery will be lengthy. In many cases
B deficiency occurs early in the germination/seedling stage (in particular with pansy and petunia). At
this growth stage symptoms of B deficiency are subtle and often go unnoticed. Symptoms may
become more obvious later in production although the actual deficiency conditions occurred earlier.
Therefore, proactive cultural practices to prevent B deficiency from developing, especially for crops
with a history of B deficiency, are most effective. Cultural practices that can help prevent B deficiency
from developing include: avoid overwatering plug trays and flats, lowering greenhouse humidity by
venting in outside air, using fans to promote air movement, or raising greenhouse/root-zone
temperatures.
Drench applications with a B containing product can also be used for preventative and
corrective measures. Use caution when applying supplemental B; plants require only a small amount
of B and over application of B leading to toxicity is easily done.
Some products that can be used:
• Soluble Trace Element Mix (S.T.E.M.) at 4 ounces per 100 gallons (supplies 4 ppm B plus
other trace elements)
• Borax (11% Boron) at 0.75 ounces per 100 gallons (supplies 6 ppm B)
• Solubor (20% Boron) at 0.4 ounces per 100 gallons (supplies 6 ppm B)
Note: Trade names used herein are for convenience only. No endorsement of products is intended, nor is
criticism of un
| Home | Seed Village Concept | Related Links | Contact us | Seed Treatment :: Methods ACID DELINTING IN COTTON What is? In cotton, seeds are removed from kapas the fruiting body which has both seed and lint. In the separated seed, seed coat will have hairy outgrowth and this is the genetic characteristic feature of the seed. These seeds are known as fuzzy seed as the hair like growth is known as fuzz. Normally these fuzzy cotton seeds are used for sowing purpose and these seeds creates problems on sowing as Maintenance plant population in the field mainly due to difficulty in recognition of contaminates, broken seeds, diseased seeds, insect infected seeds, immature seeds etc. Non free flowing nature of the fuzzy seed make the sowing difficult More seed rate Lesser storability Hence separation of seed from the lint to increase the free flowing nature of the seed proper removal of the fuzz, the external hair from the seed coat...
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