Plant Nutrient and Feeding Guidelines

May 2, 2008 by admin  
Filed under Growing with Hydroponics

Plant Nutrient and Feeding Guidelines

All plants need nutrients to supply them with the elements needed for vital biochemical processes. Nitrogen (N), phosphorus (P) and potassium (K) are the top three that are generally listed, but there are more than a dozen others. Magnesium (Mg), iron (Fe), calcium (Ca) and several more perform essential roles in the life of hydroponic plants, just as they do in soil-based gardens.

Nitrogen is used by growing leaves; but despite the fact that the air is about 79% nitrogen, plants need it in the form of a supplement. The N2 molecule in air is very stable and plants don’t need to break it apart to use single nitrogen atoms. Phosphorus is essential to root growth and owing to its role in enzyme formation potassium aids in disease resistance.

There are other elements which perform a variety of functions to aid growing plants. Calcium, for example, is a large component of cell walls and also helps to deliver ions to various parts of the plant. Chlorine (Cl) is a component of chlorophyll and an important participant in photosynthesis. Iron is essential to the hemoglobin molecule, which is formed in plants as well as animals and it helps to transport the oxygen needed for cellular respiration.

Pre-made solutions are the easiest to work with when it comes to supplying all the elements that plants need. Dosage is important as it is with any compound. For very young plants, such as small cuttings or those that are just germinating, 1/3 teaspoon of calcium nitrate dissolved in a gallon of water is about right. Plants that are flowering will require more, about 3/4 teaspoon of calcium nitrate.

Water and temperature conditions are important factors when it comes to feeding your plants. Any solution should be applied at room temperature and this should also be the temperature of any water used in hydroponic gardens.

Dry plants should not be fed nutrients as it is possible for them to be burned by the nitrogen. However, this is rarely a problem with hydroponics, although one ‘branch’ which is known as aeroponics, where the plants are grown in air, can suffer that problem.

Allowing any water to stand overnight will help to evaporate any excess chlorine from home water sources. Mineralized water is preferable to distilled water for this purpose as it will contain calcium and other useful elements.

Regulate the pH to keep it as near neutral as possible. As plants take up nutrients they’ll tend to make the water alkaline. Add tiny small amounts of sulfuric acid to move it back to neutral. Sodium hydroxide will help shift excessively acidic water back to a neutral pH.

Hydroponically grown plants are more sensitive to nutrient levels and less able to self-regulate than those in soil-based gardens. In soil, for example, they can take up or shed compounds. Releasing compounds into the water medium doesn’t move them away from the plant. The hydroponic gardener will need to exercise more care to keep plants healthy.

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