An infrared flashlight that growers shine on plants could eventually be used to determine whether a plant contains the right amount of nutrients.
USDA-Agricultural Research Service scientists are testing commercial nutrient sensors in their efforts to develop improved portable ones. The goal is to provide growers with extra days to correct nutrient problems before plants are seriously damaged. These sensors could determine ways that plants signal stress, enabling growers to detect problems before symptoms show up.
The scientists are working to develop a grower-affordable, easy-to-use portable kit.
{sidebar id=1}
For more: Jonathan Frantz, USDA-Agricultural Research Service, (419) 530-1531; www.ars.usda.gov/is.
Latest from Garden Center
- The Growth Industry Episode 10: State of the Horticulture Industry
- Scientists develop vitamin A-enriched tomato to fight global deficiency
- Tennessee Green Industry Field Day scheduled for June 11
- UTIA and UT Knoxville research teams will develop automated compost monitoring system
- Ken and Deena Altman receive American Floral Endowment Ambassador Award
- Native before it was cool
- Proven Winners partners with Pure Line Seeds to offer vegetable plants
- [WATCH] Taking root: The green industry’s guide to successful internships