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SOIL

SOIL. http://plantsinaction.science.uq.edu.au. Primary nutrients. N +/- P + K + S - Ca + Mg + Fe + Mn + Cu + Zn + B + Mo - Al +. Secondary nutrients. Micronutrients {Ni + and Cl - are sometimes included}. LIME

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SOIL

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  1. SOIL

  2. http://plantsinaction.science.uq.edu.au Primary nutrients • N+/- • P+ • K+ • S- • Ca+ • Mg+ • Fe+ • Mn+ • Cu+ • Zn+ • B+ • Mo- • Al+ Secondary nutrients Micronutrients {Ni+ and Cl- are sometimes included}

  3. LIME • Agricultural lime {Calcium carbonate (CaCO3)} aka – ground limestone • Dolomite{CaCO3 & MgCO3 } refer to soil analysis slide Dolomitic limestone – combination of above 2 • Burnt lime {calcium oxide { CaO } • Hydrated lime {calcium hydroxide Ca(OH)2 } • Gypsum(calcium sulfate) –does not have the capacity to change soil pH and is not a liming compound. www.osu.edu

  4. Dolomite and dolomitic lime are NOT the same!

  5. Fast Acting?

  6. Fineness factor Lime doesn’t neutralize acid until it dissolves. Smaller the particle size the faster it goes into solution. (increased surface area)

  7. prilling Solidification of droplets of molten material free-falling against an upward stream of air in a tower. The resulting solidified drops are called prills.

  8. Prilled Fast acting lime

  9. Lime doesn’t neutralize acid until it dissolves. Smaller the particle size the faster it goes into solution. • Particles going thru a #10 sieve (1/700“) are soluble enough to be effective. • Solubility rating of #40 sieve is 1.0 while #10 sieve has a rating of 0.30.

  10. Agricultural lime

  11. Agricultural lime Acid neutralizing value decreases as the moisture content increases. This is called the MOISTURE FACTOR.

  12. MOISTURE FACTOR (mf) Moisture factor (mf) = Moisture factor (mf) = = 0.99 100 - % water 100 100 - 1 100

  13. calcium carbonate equivalent(CCE) An assigned value for the acid neutralizing ability of a liming material with calcium carbonate assigned a value of 100.

  14. calcium carbonate equivalent(CCE) • CaCO3 (calcitic limestone) = 100 • Agricultural lime • CaMg (CO3)2 (dolomite) = 109 • CaO (burnt or quick lime) = 179 • (calcium oxide) • Ca(OH)2(slacked or hydrated lime)= 136 • (calcium hydroxide) Both CaO and Ca(OH)2 are potentially harmful to both plants and humans and aren’t used for home gardens.

  15. Fineness factor (ff) • The degree of solubility is directly related to the size of the particles of the liming material. The smaller the particle size, the larger the surface area, the more soluble the material. • A #40 (0.25mm particle size)sieve (or finer) has been given a solubility rating of 1.0. A mesh greater than #8 (2.0mm) has a rating of zero because the large particles will not effectively change the soil pH because of its extremely slow rate of solubility.

  16. Lime score(neutralizing value) Rates the quality of the lime Lime score = cce X ff X mf Fast Acting Score = 95.5 X 1.0 X 0.99 = 94.545

  17. How Much Lime Soil test (LSU AgCtr report will tell you how much lime to add.) (LSU test lists: pH, P, K, Ca, Mg, Na, S, Cu and Zn)

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