Agronomics201303 Foliar Spray
Agronomics201303 Foliar Spray
Agronomics201303 Foliar Spray
& ECONOMICS
Facts, Myths
and Perspectives
Foliar fertilisers are increasingly used in agriculture and
new commercial products are continuously released by
fertiliser companies as a result of the increasing demand.
There is indeed abundant evidence showing the beneficial
effects of applying foliar fertilisers as a complementary
strategy to soil treatments in terms of improved plant
metabolism, yields and quality of crops. However, the
current lack of scientific knowledge on many factors
associated with the effectiveness of foliar treatments
limits the reproducibility of the results after spraying
fertilisers to different crops under different growing
conditions. Additionally, the limited transfer of technical
know-how from the scientific foliar uptake community to
the agricultural sector supports the exiting spray and
pray attitude when applying a foliar treatment to a crop
(i.e., anything may happen). Thereby, and in light of the
current foliar fertilisation scenario, the following questions
are raised: (i) which foliar fertilisation facts are currently
clear for researchers?, (ii) which kind of traditional believes
are not helpful to ensure the effectiveness of a foliar
treatment?, and (iii) what is the future of foliar
fertilisation? Dr Victoria Fernndez, from the Forest
Genetics and Eco-physiology Research Group, School of
Forest Engineering at the Technical University of Madrid,
has the story for New Ag
International.
She tackles the answers to
some of these questions in
scientific and applied terms,
stressing the great market
potential and usefulness of
foliar nutrient sprays as a
more target-oriented,
sustainable and
environmentally-friendly
complementary fertilisation
method.
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obtained in relation to the application of different element compounds and formulations on to the
surface of various crops species
and varieties. However, foliar nutrient sprays are supplied at higher
concentrations as compared to soil
treatments, but they may have a
lower environmental impact since
nutrients are direct delivered to
the organs where they are
required following the implementation of suitable foliar fertiliser
programs.
In recent years, the potential of
foliar fertiliser treatments as a sustainable tool to improve yields and
quality of horticultural and field
crops subjected to abiotic stress
(e.g., drought and nutrient deficiencies) has been recognised, and
continuous efforts are made by
the industry to improve the performance of foliar nutrient formulations. Additionally, an array of
plant physiological (e.g., stomata
opening or plant water and nutrient status) and environmental factors (e.g., light, relative humidity
AG RO N O M I C S
& ECONOMICS
PLANT SURFACES:
A HETEROGENEOUS
PHYSICAL-CHEMICAL SCENARIO
Most aerial plant parts such as
fruits, leaves and stems, are covered by an extra-cellular layer
named the cuticle. This is a lipidrich membrane largely composed
of waxes (epi-and intra-cuticular),
a polymer matrix of cutin (poly-
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& ECONOMICS
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Formulation factors
Light
Relative humidity
Solubility
Temperature
Rate of retention
Wind speed
Rain, fog
Molecular size
Ease to be metabolically incorporated
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impervious to surface-deposited
solutions, despite there is an
important body of literature providing evidence for the process
foliar uptake. The stomatal pathway has been especially disregarded during the last decades and
consideration of plant metabolic
rhythms (i.e., circadian rhythms)
which may rule stomatal aperture
at least in temperate zones of the
world, may help raising the rate of
uptake and translocation of foliar
fertilisers.
On the other hand, foliar fertilisers
have been traditionally used to
cure nutrient deficiencies in crop
plants and recent evidence suggests that such leaves may not be
so permeable to leaf-applied solutions. For instance, we have
observed a disruption of stomatal
opening in iron-chlorotic leaves
and boron-deficient leaves, which
may limit the rate of uptake of
foliar fertilisers, as observed to
occur after boric acid foliar application. While there are many
reports showing the physiological
improvement of deficient plants
after fertiliser spraying, there is
AG RO N O M I C S
& ECONOMICS
solubility or point of deliquescence). Having a low point of deliquescence (i.e., the relative
humidity at which a compound
traps enough water from the environment and becomes a liquid) is
not the sole requisite to ensure the
success of a foliar fertiliser and
such property should be modulated to lower the phyto-toxicity risk
of the treatment which can otherwise cause leaf burn when applied
under certain favourable conditions.
References
1 Khayet, M., Fernndez V. 2012.
Estimation of the solubility
parameter of model plant surfaces and agrochemicals: a
valuable tool for understanding
plant surface interactions.
Theoretical Biology & Medical
Modelling 9,45.
2 Eichert, T., Goldbach, H. E.
2008. Equivalent pore radii of
hydrophilic foliar uptake routes
in stomatous and astomatous
leaf surfaces further evidence
for a stomatal pathway.
Physiologia Plantarum 132,
491-502.
3 Burkhardt J, Basi S, Pariyar S,
Hunsche M. 2012. Stomatal
penetration by aqueous solutions - an update involving leaf
surface
particles.
New
Phytololgist 196(3), 774-787.
4 Eichert, T., Peguero-Pina, J.J.;
Gil-Pelegrn, E.; Heredia, A.,
Fernndez, V. 2010. Effects of
iron chlorosis and iron resupply
on leaf xylem architecture,
water relations, gas exchange
and stomatal performance of
field-grown peach (Prunus persica (L.) Batsch.). Physiologia
Plantarum 138(1), 48-59. n
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