"Smart"Fertilizer
Improves Plant Growth, Prevents Pollution from Runoff A new smart phosphorus
fertilizer developed by Penn State horticultural scientists improves
plant root growth, drought tolerance,
shoot quality, and flowers, while also preventing up to 90 percent of
the nutrient runoff that can foul waterways.
The new fertilizer is undergoing Pennsylvania field trials with the aid
of a grant from the Commonwealths Department of Agriculture. However,
field trials in Florida have been ongoing since 1998 and have shown high
performance
of ornamentals grown in sandy soils prone to leaching.
The fertilizer has also been shown to improve plant growth and drought tolerance
while virtually eliminating leaching in nursery or greenhouse plants grown
in peat or soilless media. In the soilless systems tested by the Penn State
researchers with a wide variety of ornamental plants and vegetables, leaching
was reduced to less than 1 percent of conventionally fertilized plants.
The new field fertilizer, which is being patented by the University, was developed
by plant nutritionist Jonathan Lynch, postharvest physiologist Kathleen Brown,
and research support associate Robert Snyder. The inventors say that the new
fertilizer may be useful for stadium fields and golf courses as well as in
agriculture and floriculture.
In traditional fertilizer systems, the amount of nutrient available to
the plant is large immediately after application and declines as the plant takes
it up and the nutrient runs off when it rains, Lynch says. However,
in the new smart system, the supply of phosphorus available to the
plant always matches a level typically found in natural soils.
In the new smart system, phosphorus is automatically released and
maintained at low, natural levels by the chemical buffering action of aluminum
oxide. The phosphorus is bound on the surface of aluminum oxide granules, which
allows only a limited amount of the nutrient to be released. More of the bound
phosphorus is released only as the initial amount is used up. The low levels
of phosphorus released by the smart fertilizer mean that there
is less to enter ground and surface waters.
Lynch notes that environmental regulations on runoff can be expected to become
tighter in the near future. Sudden growths or blooms of microorganisms caused
by nutrient runoff can cause life-threatening human illness and make rivers,
streams, lakes, and beaches unattractive and unhealthy for wildlife. He adds
that Europe already has tighter regulations than the United States.
While the low, natural levels of phosphorus released by the
new smart fertilizer
can play a role in improving the environment, growers and consumers can also
benefit from improved plant quality. In experiments with marigold and impatiens
grown in the greenhouse, plants that received the new smart fertilizer
developed better root systems. High phosphorus levels created by traditional
fertilizer systems discourage root growth. Better root systems enable the plant
to be more drought-tolerant. Plants nourished with the smart fertilizer
also had a slightly higher number of flowers, and the flowers wilted more slowly
during drought.
The buffered fertilizer system can also be recharged after most of the
phosphorus on the aluminum oxide is gone, says Lynch. Using existing
systems, a grower can add phosphoric acid and the buffer could be good for 20
to 25 years.
The new fertilizer supplies only phosphorus, one of the three primary elements
needed for plant growth. The researchers are beginning research programs to
develop similar systems for nitrogen and potassium.
Barbara Hale
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