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Encyclopedia > Fertilization (soil)

Soil Fertilization or Crop Fertilization are methods of improving soil quality with a view towards improving soil fertility. Fertilization improves crop yield and provides additional income and profit for farmers. Plants need various elements in order to grow and people have known for hundreds of years of the need to improve the quality of the soil. Ancient methods varied from placing fish in a hill of corn and rock phosphate to the surface to improve production. As science and understanding has advanced soil testing has become possible as well as methods to improve the soil based on the results of those tests. Fertile soil is soil that can support abundant plant life, in particular the term is used to describe agricultural and garden soil. ... In agriculture, a soil test is the analysis of a soil sample to determine nutrient content, composition and other characteristics. ...


Nitrogen is the element in the soil that is most often lacking. Phosphorous and potasium are also needed in substantial amounts. For this reason these three elements are included in commercial fertilizers and the content of each of these items is included on the bags of fertilizer. For example a 10-10-15 fertilizer has 10 percent nitrogen, 10 percent phosphorous and 15 percent potasium. Inorganic fertilizers are generally less expensive and have higher concentrations of nutrients than organic fertilizers. General Name, Symbol, Number nitrogen, N, 7 Chemical series nonmetals Group, Period, Block 15, 2, p Appearance colorless gas Atomic mass 14. ... Phosphite is a polyatomic ion with the formula: PO33-. The archaic name for phosphite was phosphorous, not to be confused with phosphorus. ... General Name, Symbol, Number potassium, K, 19 Chemical series alkali metals Group, Period, Block 1, 4, s Appearance silvery white Atomic mass 39. ... General Name, Symbol, Number nitrogen, N, 7 Chemical series nonmetals Group, Period, Block 15, 2, p Appearance colorless gas Atomic mass 14. ... Phosphite is a polyatomic ion with the formula: PO33-. The archaic name for phosphite was phosphorous, not to be confused with phosphorus. ... General Name, Symbol, Number potassium, K, 19 Chemical series alkali metals Group, Period, Block 1, 4, s Appearance silvery white Atomic mass 39. ...


It is believed that organic agricultural methods are more environmentally friendly and better maintain soil organic matter levels. There are generally accepted scientific studies that support this supposition.[1] Regardless the source, fertilization results in increased unharvested plant biomass left on the soil surface and crop residues remaining in the soil.


Too much of a vital nutrient can be as detrimental as not enough.[2] Fertilizer burn can occur when too much fertilizer is applied, resulting in a drying out of the roots and damage or even death of the plant.[3] Organic fertilizers are just as likely to burn as inorganic fertilizers. If excess nitrogen is present the plants will begin to exude nitrogen from the leafy areas. This is called guttation. Guttation is the appearance of drops of water on the leaves of some vascular plants, such as grasses. ...


  Results from FactBites:
 
Soil Basics - Creating Fertile, Healthy Soil (1616 words)
Soil allows the growth of food crops which are consumed by humans and also plants used in the creation of medicines.
Sand particles are 2 to 0.05 mm diameter, silt particles are 0.05 to 0.002 mm diameter and clay particles are <0.002 mm diameter.
While inorganic fertilizers will work fine they have a number of disadvantages: they release their nutrients too quickly and there is some evidence to show that plants develop a resistance to inorganic fertilizer methods over time, requiring more and more to achieve the same effect.
Grade 2 Soil - Science Lesson Plan - John Muir Education Committee - Sierra Club (734 words)
Students know that soil is made partly from weathered rock and partly from organic materials and that soils differ in their color, texture, capacity to retain water, and ability to support the growth of many kinds of plants.
Remind them that soil is a mixture of organic material such as leaves and twigs that have decomposed, and pieces of larger rocks that were broken down by the process of weathering.
One should be a sample of very sandy soil, the second a sample of fertile soil, and the third one a sample of hard, clay-like soil.
  More results at FactBites »


 

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