Nitrogen deficiency

All plants require sufficient supplies of macronutrients for healthy growth, and nitrogen (N) is a nutrient that is commonly in limited supply. Nitrogen deficiency in plants can occur when organic matter with high carbon content, such as sawdust, is added to soil.[1] Soil organisms use any nitrogen to break down carbon sources, making N unavailable to plants.[1] This is known as "robbing" the soil of nitrogen. All vegetables apart from nitrogen fixing legumes are prone to this disorder.

A young cabbage plant exhibiting nitrogen deficiency.

Nitrogen deficiency can be prevented in the short term by using grass mowings as a mulch, or foliar feeding with manure, and in the longer term by building up levels of organic matter in the soil. Sowing green manure crops such as grazing rye to cover soil over the winter will help to prevent nitrogen leaching, while leguminous green manures such as winter tares will fix additional nitrogen from the atmosphere.

Symptoms

Some symptoms of nitrogen deficiency (in absence or low supply) are given below :

  1. The chlorophyll content of the plant leaves is reduced which results in pale yellow color (chlorosis). Older leaves turn completely yellow.
  2. Flowering, fruitings, protein and starch contents are reduced. Reduction in protein results in stunted growth and dormant lateral buds.[2]

Disease

Plants look thin, pale and the condition is called general starvation.[2]

Effect on Potato Production

Symptoms of nitrogen deficiencies in plants is general chlorosis of the leaves, which is when leaves turn pale green, and leaves cup upwards quite severely in deficient plants.[3] Nitrogen deficiencies also cause leaves to remain small, and drop prematurely, resulting in less photosynthesis occurring in the plant, and fewer, smaller tubers can form for harvest. Research done by Yara International has shown that there is a direct correlation between tuber size and yield, and the amount of plant-available nitrogen in the soil. This makes it crucial that the fields have enough nitrogen in the soil to grow a prosperous crop.[4] However, excess nitrogen in the soil can also be harmful to potato production, influencing how well the roots are able to develop, and delays can occur in tuber initiation during the tuberization stage of potato growth.[5]

Detection

The visual symptoms of nitrogen deficiency mean that it can be relatively easy to detect in some plant species. Symptoms include poor plant growth, and leaves become pale green or yellow because they are unable to make sufficient chlorophyll. Leaves in this state are said to be chlorotic. Lower leaves (older leaves) show symptoms first, since the plant will move nitrogen from older tissues to more important younger ones.[6] Nevertheless, plants are reported to show nitrogen deficiency symptoms at different parts. For example, Nitrogen deficiency of tea is identified by retarded shoot growth and yellowing of younger leaves.[7]

However, these physical symptoms can also be caused by numerous other stresses, such as deficiencies in other nutrients, toxicity, herbicide injury, disease, insect damage or environmental conditions. Therefore, nitrogen deficiency is most reliably detected by conducting quantitative tests in addition to assessing the plants visual symptoms. These tests include soil tests and plant tissue test.[8]

Plant tissue tests destructively sample the plant of interest. However, nitrogen deficiency can also be detected non-destructively by measuring chlorophyll content.

Chlorophyll content tests work because leaf nitrogen content and chlorophyll concentration are closely linked, which would be expected since the majority of leaf nitrogen is contained in chlorophyll molecules.[9] Chlorophyll content can be detected with a Chlorophyll content meter; a portable instrument that measures the greenness of leaves to estimate their relative chlorophyll concentration.

Chlorophyll content can also be assessed with a chlorophyll fluorometer, which measures a chlorophyll fluorescence ratio to identify phenolic compounds that are produced in higher quantities when nitrogen is limited. These instruments can therefore be used to non-destructively test for nitrogen deficiency.

Corrective Measures

Fertilisers like ammonium phosphate, calcium ammonium nitrate, urea can be supplied. Foliar spray of urea can be a quick method.[2]

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See also

References

  1. "Compost Fundamentals: Compost Needs - Carbon Nitrogen Relationships".
  2. Pandey, S N; Sinha, B K (November 2009). "Mineral Nutrition". Plant Physiology (fourth ed.). 576Masjid Road, Jangpura, New Delhi-110014: VIKAS PUBLISHING HOUSE Pvt. Ltd. pp. 125–126. ISBN 978-8125918790.CS1 maint: location (link)
  3. "Idaho Nutrient Management - Potato". www.extension.uidaho.edu. Retrieved 2016-12-02.
  4. "Role of Nitrogen in Potato Production | N Deficiencies & Application | Yara". www.yara.us. Archived from the original on 2017-12-14. Retrieved 2016-12-02.
  5. Network, University of Nebraska-Lincoln | Web Developer (2015-09-17). "Nitrogen | CropWatch". cropwatch.unl.edu. Retrieved 2016-12-02.
  6. http://www.rainbowplantfood.com/agronomics/efu/nitrogen.pdf
  7. "Soil & Nutrition | Upasi Tea Research Foundation (TRF)".
  8. "CROP NUTRIENT DEFICIENCIES - TOXICITIES | Plant Nutrition | Nutrients".
  9. http://digitalcommons.unl.edu/cgi/viewcontent.cgi?article=2349&context=extensionhist
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