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Read the
magazine
story to find out more. |
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 Technician Doug
Sturtz (left) and horticulturist Jonathan Frantz use spectrometry to detect
plant nutrients. They would like to develop a portable sensor for greenhouse
use. Click the image for more information about it. |
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Letting Plants "Talk" to You
By Don Comis
June 20, 2007
The greenhouse manager of the future walks around the greenhouse,
pointing an infrared "flashlight" at potted plants. A tiny screen tells whether
each plant has too much, too little, or just the right amount of nutrients.
During the past three years, at a new facility in Toledo, Ohio,
Agricultural Research Service (ARS) plant
pathologist
Jim
Locke and horticulturist
Jonathan
Frantz have made a great deal of progress toward realizing this automated
future. Frantz is testing commercial nutrient sensors with a view toward
developing improved portable ones. Devices like these can give greenhouse
growers a fewoften criticalextra days to correct nutrient problems
before their plants are seriously damaged.
In one approach, Frantz, Locke and colleagues are testing ways to
bounce infrared light off plants, in order to read the earliest possible
signals of nutrient deficiency. The signals could be key proteins or other
molecules associated with stress, or a change in a leafs light
reflectance as a result of a deficiency. Spotting ways in which plants signal
stress would be a way to detect a problem before any visible evidence of damage
to the plant occurs.
Currently, the scientists use commercial portable sensors that detect
nutrient ions but are expensive and have to be calibrated properly. They would
like to develop an easy-to-use portable kit that growers could buy at a
reasonable cost.
The scientists also use inductively coupled plasma (ICP) spectrometry
to determine plants' total nutrient content, but that test is suitable only for
laboratory use.
The Toledo location is a worksite of the
ARS
Application Technology Research Unit at The
Ohio State University-Wooster. It comprises labs, offices and greenhouses
on the University of Toledo's main
campus, as well as 8,000 square feet of greenhouse space leased from the nearby
public Toledo Botanical Garden. At
the garden, sensors have been installed to record everything from nutrient
levels in leaves to moisture in the soil or potting mix.
Read more
about this research in the May/June issue of Agricultural Research
magazine.
ARS is the USDA's chief scientific
research agency.