ChatterBank1 min ago
Plant food
3 Answers
In what proportions does a plant contain oxygen, carbon and hydrogen, and other significant elements / compounds? I'm wondering what my potted ones are growing from; - on the bottle of 'Plant Food' it says to add 5-10 drops of food to every litre of water. And on the side of the bottle it says:
' N10.6%
' P2O54.4% (P 1.9%)
' K2O1.7% (K 1.4%)
But it still doesn't seem very much. After all, they get enough C, H and O from air and water, but all the green bits of the plant, and other parts, seem to grow and die faster than I add this tiny amount of food, and some of them have been in the same soil for years.
' N
' P2O5
' K2O
But it still doesn't seem very much. After all, they get enough C, H and O from air and water, but all the green bits of the plant, and other parts, seem to grow and die faster than I add this tiny amount of food, and some of them have been in the same soil for years.
Answers
Best Answer
No best answer has yet been selected by Squirrel. Once a best answer has been selected, it will be shown here.
For more on marking an answer as the "Best Answer", please visit our FAQ.Over 90% of the plant is derived from C, O, H and N, all of which can be derived from the atmosphere (if the plant can fix nitrogen). If it is not a legume, nitrogen has to be added (hence the high proportion of N in your feed). The micro-nutrients include K, P, Na, Cl. Zn, S, Fe, Mo, Mn and Mg which are required in much less proportion than the big 4 macro-nutrients, which is why you need so little of the feed. The green bits are still predominantly C, N, H and O which puzzled many scientist who realised that the increase in plant weight gained was disproportionate to the amount the soil in which they grew decreased.