Download presentation
1
Soil Testing in Tomatoes
Jim Rideout Extension Specialist Soil Fertility
2
The Main Idea Maintain growth while applying only those nutrients which can not be supplied by the soil in adequate amounts
3
Other Reasons Routine monitoring can spot nutrient problems before they become nutrient deficiencies Mountain soils are extremely variable Fertility can be considered part of a good IPM program
4
How Tomatoes Differ from Agronomic Crops
May have drip fertigation Must manage calcium Need to consider source of nutrients Earliness and quality are important High value per acre
5
Soil Analysis Basics
6
NCDA&CS Agronomic Division
Soil Plant tissue Irrigation water Nutrient solutions Nematode assay
7
What Does Soil Analysis Measure ?
The extractable nutrient concentration in a soil sample Does not measure the total nutrient concentration Estimates the ability of the soil to supply nutrients to a crop Optimized for annual row crops
8
Recommendation Philosophies
Crop Response Nutrient Replacement (maintenance) Nutrient Buildup Cation Balancing NC Recommendations – Crop response + some maintenance
9
Soil Sampling Methods
10
Importance of Collecting a Representative Soil Sample
One acre of soil, 6” deep, weighs about 2,000,000 pounds Weight of soil in box about 1 pound Weight of sample analyzed is about 2.5 g (1/10) of an ounce
11
Selecting Areas for Routine Sampling
Areas should be less than 5 acres Similar soil type and crop history Similar fertilization history Keep blocks same year to year
12
Soil Sample Handling Mix cores well in clean plastic bucket
Fill box to line Do not oven-dry sample Send sample in for analysis as soon as possible
13
Stick With Your Lab Different reporting units
Different soil extracting solutions Different yield assumptions Different recommendation philosophies
14
NCDA Sample Volume 252,025 soil analyses last year
Turnaround time varies by month 7 to 10 days in summer February 2004: 5 to 6 weeks
16
New codes Will reduce lime recommendation to account for un-reacted lime
17
Interpretation of Results
18
Now What Do I Do?
19
Crop Information
20
Basic Soil Information
21
Soil pH and Lime
22
Lime Recommendations Actual pH Acidity (buffer pH)
Target pH (6.5 for tomato) Residual credit for applied lime CANNOT make an accurate lime recommendation based on pH alone
23
Nitrogen Based on crop code, not on test results
24
NCDA Index System Unique to North Carolina
Converts nutrients to common units for interpretation Used for P, K, Mn, Zn, Cu, S Similar to index used for tissue
25
Soil Interpretation Indices
26
Phosphorus and Potassium
27
Calcium and Magnesium Expressed as percent of CEC
May determine the type of lime needed Need to consider CEC for gypsum applications
28
Calcium and Magnesium
29
Micronutrients and Sulfur
30
Salinity Information
31
Additional Information
33
Fruit Calcium
34
Causes of Low Fruit Calcium
Low soil calcium Low soil pH Nutrient imbalances Excessively wet or dry soil Large fruit Variety differences
35
Cation Balance and Fruit Calcium
Must balance calcium, potassium and magnesium in the soil Excessive potassium fertilization can reduce fruit calcium content Excessive magnesium fertilization from dolomitic lime can reduce fruit calcium content
36
+K +K Ca ++ K+ K+ +K +K Ca ++ Ca ++ ++ Mg K+ K+ Ca ++ ++ Mg +H +H Ca ++
37
Questions?
Similar presentations
© 2025 SlidePlayer.com. Inc.
All rights reserved.