Course Content
JRF Horticulture

Role and Deficiency Symptoms of Plant Nutrients

Primary Macronutrients

 

Nitrogen (N)

🔹 Absorbed Form: Nitrate (NO₃⁻) & Ammonium (NH₄⁺)

🔹 Functions / Role:

  • Major constituent of amino acids, proteins, enzymes, chlorophyll, nucleic acids (DNA/RNA), and coenzymes.
  • Promotes vegetative growth, especially in leafy vegetables.
  • Enhances chlorophyll content and photosynthesis.
  • Improves forage quality in fodder crops.

 

🔹 Deficiency Symptoms:

  • Older leaves first affected.
  • Uniform chlorosis (yellowing) of older leaves including veins.
  • Leaves become stiff and erect.
  • In cereals: ‘V’-shaped yellowing from tip toward base.
  • Poor tillering, reduced growth and yield.

 

Phosphorus (P)

🔹 Absorbed Form: H₂PO₄⁻ (in acidic soil). HPO₄²⁻ (in neutral to alkaline soil)

🔹 Functions / Role:

  • Essential for energy transfer reactions (ATP, ADP).
  • Integral part of nucleic acids and phospholipids.
  • Promotes early root development and seed/fruit formation.
  • Stimulates flowering and maturity.
  • Required for nitrogen fixation in legumes.

 

🔹 Deficiency Symptoms:

  • Older leaves affected first.
  • Leaves become small, dark green, erect, and may show purplish/reddish tinge.
  • Bronze or bluish-green tint on the underside of leaves.
  • Delayed maturity and poor root development.
  • Reduced flowering and seed set.

 

Potassium (K)

🔹 Absorbed Form: K⁺ (Potassium ion)

🔹 Functions / Role:

  • Activates over 60 enzymes involved in growth and metabolism.
  • Regulates stomatal opening and water balance.
  • Improves disease resistance, lodging resistance, and cold tolerance.
  • Essential for translocation of sugars and starch.
  • Enhances fruit quality, size, color, and taste.

 

🔹 Deficiency Symptoms:

  • Older leaves show symptoms first.
  • Chlorosis along leaf margins followed by necrosis (dead tissues).
  • Leaf tip and margin scorching (leaf burn).
  • Upward curling of leaves.
  • In fruits: poor development, reduced color and taste.
  • Barley is very sensitive; cotton shows small bolls and poor opening.

 

Quick Comparison Table (for Revision)

Feature

Nitrogen (N)

Phosphorus (P)

Potassium (K)

Absorbed Form

NO₃⁻, NH₄⁺

H₂PO₄⁻, HPO₄²⁻

K⁺

Mobility

Mobile

Mobile

Mobile

Plant Part Affected First

Older leaves

Older leaves

Older leaves

Role

Proteins, Chlorophyll, Growth

Energy transfer, Root, Flower, Seed

Enzyme activation, Sugar transport

Deficiency

Uniform chlorosis, V-yellowing

Purpling, Small erect leaves

Marginal chlorosis, Tip burn

Affected Crops

All crops, cereals highly affected

Legumes, root crops

Cotton, fruit crops, barley

 

 

Secondary Macronutrients

Calcium (Ca)

  • Role:
    • Component of cell walls (calcium pectate).
    • Essential for cell division and growing points.
    • Maintains membrane integrity and neutralizes organic acids.
  • Deficiency symptoms:
    • Dead shoot tips, distorted growth.
    • Poor root development and short roots.
    • Blossom end rot in tomato.

 

Magnesium (Mg)

  • Role:
    • Central atom in chlorophyll.
    • Involved in enzyme activation, starch translocation, and fat/oil synthesis.
  • Deficiency symptoms:
    • Interveinal chlorosis in older leaves.
    • Premature leaf fall.
    • Reduced photosynthesis.

 

Sulphur (S)

  • Role:
    • Component of amino acids (methionine, cysteine), vitamins.
    • Required for chlorophyll formation and enzyme stability.
  • Deficiency symptoms:
    • Yellowing of young leaves (not older).
    • Thin, small leaves, reduced nodule formation.
    • Top sickness in tobacco, whiptail in cauliflower.

 

Micronutrients

  1. Iron (Fe)
  • Role: Needed for chlorophyll synthesis, respiration, electron transport. Component of cytochromes, ferredoxin.
  • Deficiency symptoms:
    • Interveinal chlorosis in young leaves.
    • Khaira disease in rice.

 

  1. Manganese (Mn)
  • Role: Activates enzymes, essential for photosynthesis (Hill reaction). Produces SOD to protect chloroplasts.
  • Deficiency symptoms:
    • Chequered chlorosis, especially in oat, soybean.
    • Grey speck of oat, Pahala blight of sugarcane.

 

  1. Zinc (Zn)
  • Role: Required for IAA synthesis, enzyme activity. Component of carbonic anhydrase, RNA polymerase.
  • Deficiency symptoms:
    • White bud in maize.
    • Khaira disease in rice.
    • Interveinal chlorosis, rosetting.

 

  1. Copper (Cu)
  • Role: Part of electron transport chain (plastocyanin). Helps in SOD production, photosynthesis, lignin formation.
  • Deficiency symptoms:
    • Twisting of young leaves, poor pigmentation.
    • Die-back in citrus, exanthema in trees.

 

  1. Boron (B)
  • Role: Important for cell wall integrity, sugar translocation, reproduction. Maintains apical dominance, affects Ca metabolism.
  • Deficiency symptoms:
    • Brittle leaves, bud necrosis.
    • Cracked fruits, hollow stem in cauliflower.
    • Brown heart in beet.

 

  1. Molybdenum (Mo)
  • Role: Component of nitrogenase, involved in N-fixation. Aids in nitrate reduction.
  • Deficiency symptoms:
    • Whiptail in cauliflower.
    • Poor N-fixation in legumes.

 

  1. Chlorine (Cl)
  • Role: Involved in photosynthesis, osmotic adjustment. Affects carbohydrate metabolism in tobacco.
  • Deficiency symptoms:
    • Wilting, chlorosis.
    • Reduced root and leaf growth.

 

  1. Nickel (Ni)
  • Role: Component of urease enzyme. Essential for seed viability, N metabolism.
  • Deficiency symptoms:
    • Poor grain filling, reduced seed germination.

 

  1. Cobalt (Co)
  • Role: Needed for vitamin B₁₂ (leghaemoglobin formation). Required by Rhizobium in legumes.
  • Deficiency symptoms:
    • Poor nodulation, stunted legume growth.

 

  1. Sodium (Na)
  • Role: Essential for sugar beet, helps in water balance, can substitute K in some plants.
  • Deficiency symptoms: Wilting, poor drought tolerance.

 

  1. Silicon (Si)
  • Role: Strengthens cell wall, increases resistance to pests/diseases. Improves grain quality, plant structure.
  • Deficiency symptoms: Weak stems, disease susceptibility, especially in rice.

 

General Deficiency Identification

Region

Chlorosis

Necrosis

Examples

Old Leaves

N, P, K

K, Mg

V-shaped yellowing in cereals (N), dark green with purpling (P)

New Leaves

Fe, Zn, Mn

Zn, B

White bud (Zn), tip burn (B)

Both

S, Mo, Cu

Mo, Cu

Whiptail (Mo), die-back (Cu)

 

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